New Republic
 
The Winners and Losers of Israel's  Election  
 


    *    
 
 
Ben Birnbaum
 



    *   January 22, 2013

 
The surprising results from Israel's elections capped one  of the more 
eventful campaign seasons in the country's history—a three-month  period that 
featured a mini-war with Gaza, the surprise alliance between Prime  Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud and then-Foreign Minister Avigdor  Lieberman’s 
Yisrael Beiteinu, Lieberman’s indictment and departure from the  foreign 
ministry, the return to politics of former foreign minister Tzipi Livni,  the 
retirement of Defense Minister Ehud Barak, the flirtation (and ultimate  
non-return) of former prime minister Ehud Olmert, and the surge of political  
newcomers Naftali Bennett on the hard right and Yair Lapid in the  center.

Much will  change in the coming days as vote totals are finalized, Knesset 
seats are  allocated, and parties prepare for coalition negotiations. But 
here’s a  preliminary look at Tuesday’s winners and losers. 

Winners

Benjamin Netanyahu: Yes, his party suffered an extremely disappointing 
showing, with  just 31 seats (16 fewer than political adviser Arthur 
Finkelstein 
famously  predicted when he encouraged the alliance with Lieberman’s 
party). But exit  polls show it still won at least twelve more seats than its 
closest competitor.  And barring both a slight erosion for the right-wing bloc 
in the final results  and a surprise merger between Israel’s center-left 
parties—both distinct  possibilities—Netanyahu is still set to keep his job, 
and is on his way to  becoming Israel’s longest-serving prime minister. Still, 
building a governing  coalition is going to be a lot harder than he 
imagined, and it seems unlikely  that his new one will last for the same four 
years 
that the current one  did.

Yair Lapid: The journalist-cum-politician was the night’s big  surprise, 
with exit polls showing his party coming in second at 19 seats (he had  been 
polling at 11-12). The self-styled centrist ran a quiet, smart campaign  
focused on reforming government and rescinding the many privileges (such as  
exemption for military service) given to Israel’s ultra-Orthodox. Lapid has 
long  signaled that he planned to join the government, but he has said 
repeatedly that  he would not be a moderate “fig leaf” for a right-wing 
government, 
meaning that  Netanyahu will likely be forced to welcome one of the other 
center-left parties  (Labor or Tzipi Livni’s “The Movement”) into the fold. 
Reports said Lapid was  angling to be education minister. But with his 
surprise showing, might the  former broadcast star demand the now-vacant 
foreign 
ministry? Netanyahu could do  worse.

Naftali  Bennett: Unlike Lapid, whose popular Friday-night  news program 
made him a household name, Bennett was a virtual unknown just a few  months 
ago. But the hardline 40-year-old former software tycoon managed to  
capitalize on right-wing disenchantment with Netanyahu and bring the struggling 
 
HaBayit HeYehud (“Jewish Home”) from just three seats in the outgoing Knesset 
to  12, according to the exit polls. Bennett and Netanyahu have an unhappy 
history.  The former served as the latter's chief-of-staff during his time as 
opposition  leader but was reportedly sent packing after repeated turf 
battles with  Netanyahu’s wife Sara. Netanyahu would ideally love to exclude 
him 
from his  coalition, but it’s not clear he will have a choice.

Meretz: The  leftist party, long Israel’s most forward-leaning voice on the 
peace process,  barely made it into the last Knesset with three seats but 
was a leading voice  against much of the Netanyahu government's anti-Arab and 
other anti-democratic  legislation in the Knesset over the past four years. 
According to exit polls, it  more than doubled its strength with seven 
seats.

Losers:

Likud: According to the exit polls, Israel’s ruling party will see its  
parliamentary strength drop from 27 to 20 (Yisrael Beiteinu, its election  
partner, will take 11 of the alliance’s 31 seats--a handsome showing given  
Lieberman’s legal troubles). The party appears to have been hurt by a pincer  
movement. From the right, Bennett managed to cannibalize a large chunk of 
voters  who were displeased by Netanyahu’s quick ceasefire with Hamas in last 
month’s  mini-war. And Netanyahu’s efforts to win them back by championing 
settlement  expansion, along with the Likud’s TeaParty-like primary results 
and the alliance  with Lieberman, apparently caused a hemorrhaging of voters 
to Lapid in the  center. If Netanyahu is tasked with forming the government, 
as expected, his own  party will control less than a third of the Knesset 
members in his government. 

Shelly  Yacimovich and the Labor Party: Shelly  Yacimovich, an unabashed 
socialist with little interest in the issues of peace  and war that animated 
previous Labor leaders, rode last summer’s social protests  to the helm of 
the Labor Party. While polls throughout the campaign showed Labor  poised to 
resume its place as Israel’s second-largest party, exit polls  indicated that 
it would come in third with 17 seats—just four more than the  party’s 
humiliating showing in the last elections. Yacimovich recently promised  not to 
join a Netanyahu-led government, but that followed months of demurral on  
the subject.

Israel’s ultra-Orthodox: For  decades, Israel’s religious parties, Shas 
and United Torah Judaism, had won a  variety of goodies (including exemption 
from military service, cheap housing,  and generous child allowances and 
yeshiva stipends) by joining governments of  both the left and right. These 
privileges have caused extreme resentment among  the Israeli majority that is 
required to work, pay taxes, and serve in the army,  but the power of Shas and 
United Torah Judaism have prevented any meaningful  change (including over 
the summer, during Israel’s shortlived unity government).  All that is about 
to change. If the next government leaves one mark on Israeli  society, it 
is likely to be a new social contract with this rapidly growing  sector of 
Israel’s population.

Tzipi Livni: Nearly four years  after Livni led her former party Kadima to 
28 seats (one more than Likud), the  former foreign minister won one-fourth 
that total with her new party (“The  Movement). It was a disappointing 
showing for Livni, who had managed to lure not  only a good chunk of Kadima’s 
parliamentary faction, but two former Labor Party  leaders (Amram Mitzna and 
Amir Peretz). Livni, a hawk-turned-dove who led the  Israeli negotiating team 
in peace talks with the Palestinians during the last  Israeli government, 
had sought to put the peace issue back on the agenda.  Unfortunately for her, 
Israeli voters had other priorities.

The peace process: These were the first Israeli elections since the  1967 
Six-Day War in which Israel’s conflict with its Arab neighbors (and with  the 
Palestinians in particular) did not figure prominently in the public 
debate.  While the relatively strong showing of the center-left parties is good 
news for  potential concessions on the peace front, it’s worth noting that the 
only two  parties that emphasized the issue—Meretz and Livni’s Movement—
won a combined 14  of the Knesset’s 120 seats.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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