Al Jazeera
 
Status quo’ biggest winner in Israel  vote
 
Analysts say prospects for peace with Palestinians  unlikely to improve
as voters express economic  concerns
 
       
 
Analysts say prospects  of peace with Palestinians unlikely to improve as 
voters express economic  concerns


Chris Arsenault
 
 23 Jan 2013 
     
‘Status quo’ biggest winner in Israel vote 
 
Analysts say prospects  of peace with Palestinians unlikely to improve as 
voters express economic  concerns.

_Chris Arsenault_ (http://www.aljazeera.com/profile/chris-arsenault.html)  
Last  Modified: 23 Jan  2013


 
 
 
Tel Aviv, Israel: The  results of Tuesday’s election could be seen as 
successful damage control for  Israel’s international brand image, and an 
expression of dissatisfaction on the  economy, but a new coalition  government 
is 
unlikely to improve prospects for peace with the Palestinians,  analysts have 
told Al Jazeera.  
Incumbent Prime Minister Binyamin  Netanyahu claimed victory after his 
Likud- Yisrael-Beiteinu alliance won an  estimated 31 seats in Israel’s 
120-member Knesset, according to exit  polls.  
“We need to construct a wide government,  which I’ve started to do already,
” he told cheering supporters on  Wednesday. 
Likud lost about 20 percent of its seats  compared to the 2009 election.  
Many view Yesh Atid (There is a Future) as  the campaign’s biggest winner. 
It’s projected to take 19 seats, according to  exit polls. The party’s 
leader, former television journalist Yair Lapid who is  seen as a centrist, 
will 
likely join a coalition government with  Netanyahu.  
“If anything, Israelis voted for two status-quo  parties,” Dimi Reider, 
contributing editor to 972 magazine and associate fellow  at the European 
Council of Foreign Relations, told Al Jazeera. “They voted for  Likud, which 
created the status quo [including a non-existent peace process with  the 
Palestinians] and Yesh Atid, the party that is least likely to change the  
status 
quo.”  
Projections showed right-wing parties with a  combined strength of 61-62 
seats against 58-59 for the centre-left. Thirty-two  parties ran in the 
election and voter turnout was high compared to previous  elections.  
'Pressing issues'  
“The people of Israel… want a country that deals  with pressing issues 
including housing reform and education reform,” Rabbi Dov  Lipman, a Yesh Atid 
politician, told reporters.  
The campaign focusing on domestic issues resonated  with voters, Lipman 
said. Prior to the vote, many observers thought concerns  about Iran’s nuclear 
programme and prospects for peace talks with the  Palestinians would play a 
larger role in the campaign.  
The Labour party, which also focused on the economy, polled third with 17  
seats. Jewish Home, a nationalist party headed by former Special Forces 
commando  Naftali Bennett is predicted to come fourth with 12 seats, in a 
result 
that  surprised many analysts.  
Prior to the election, the far-right was  expected to make major gains.  
“If anything, there was a shift away from the  right to the centre,” said 
Yehuda Ben Meir, research fellow at the Institute for  National Security 
Studies in Israel.  
“I think the clear coalition partner for Mr  Netanyahu is Mr Lapid” and 
Jewish Home is also likely to be included in the new  government, Meir told 
reporters at a press briefing.  
Others disagree with Meir’s analysis and backroom  negotiating over which 
parties will form the governing coalition is likely to  continue for the next 
several days.  
The new-right was supplanted by a party  representing Israel’s traditional 
centre primarily because of economic concerns,  voters and analysts said.  
“People feel they need a change in the economic  situation,” Hila Fishov, 
a student in Tel Aviv who supports Yesh Atid, told  Al Jazeera. “I don’t 
know what Lapid’s position will be on settlements.”  
Unsettled issues  
Some observers consider Israeli settlements built  on land occupied after 
the 1967 war as the biggest obstacle for a long-term  peace deal with the 
Palestinians.  
Netanyahu says he believes in a two-state solution  for the conflict. He 
has, however, continued building settlements on occupied  Palestinian land in 
the West Bank, leading critics to contend that he is not  serious about 
peace.  
Many on Israel’s right, and some on the left, seem  to favour maintaining 
the status quo vis-a-vi the Palestinians.  
“The peace process itself was not very dominant in  this election,” Neta 
Oren, a specialist on Israeli politics and visiting  professor at George 
Mason University, told Al Jazeera. The new government is  unlikely “to change 
anything” on that front, she said.  
On the domestic front, Israel is facing a budget deficit of about 40bn  
shekels ($10.5bn). Unable to pass a budget in October, Netanyahu decided to  
dissolve the government and call an election.  
If Netanyahu stays on as prime minister, a likely  scenario, Lapid could 
become foreign affairs minister or finance minister,  Reider said.  
Israel’s budget deficit rose to 4.2 percent of  gross domestic product in 
2012, double the original estimate.  
Responsibility for the budget could be a poison  chalice for the telegenic 
newcomer, Reider said, as the population won’t be  happy with austerity 
plans.  
Representing Israel’s brand 
As a possible foreign minister, Lapid would be  responsible for 
representing Israel’s brand to the outside world. The country’s  image has 
taken a 
beating recently, with allies such as the US and UK  complaining about 
continued settlement expansion and general  intransience.  
William Hague, Britain’s foreign minister, warned  Israel on Tuesday it was 
losing international support, saying prospects for a  two-state solution to 
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were almost dead because  of expanding 
Jewish settlements. 
Lacking political baggage and carrying himself with a smooth demeanour, 
Lapid  might be the right person to explain Israel’s often-controversial 
positions at  bodies like the UN. 
“If you compare him [Lapid] to [former foreign minister Avigdor] Liberman 
or  Bennett, yes, he will do well for Israel’s [international] reputation,” 
Oren  said. 
Official results will be announced on January 30 and the new government is  
likely to take office sometime in mid-February.

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