The Jerusalem Post

Meretz members to vote in first-ever party primary

Zandberg: We’ll shape Israeli Left in next Knesset

- • By EYTAN HALON

Members of the left-wing Meretz Party will head to the polls beginning at 2 p.m. on Thursday as they vote in the party’s first-ever primary to decide its list for the April 9 Knesset elections.

Twenty-three hopefuls will run in the primary, open to Meretz’s 21,000 members and conducted by electronic voting, with recent polls projecting that the party will win five seats in the April election.

Among those aiming to secure top spots in the party list, after leader Tamar Zandberg, are incumbent Knesset members Ilan Gilon, Mossi Raz, Michal Rozin and Israeli-Arab Esawi Frej.

Others hoping to finish the primary race on a high and enter the Knesset for the first time include veteran Peace Now campaigner Yariv Oppenheime­r, former party leadership hopeful Avi Buskila, head of the party’s periphery operations Avi Dabush and renowned Druze educator Ali Shalalha.

“The left-wing party of Israel will choose tomorrow the left-wing list for the Knesset,” said Zandberg ahead of the primary.

“We are proud to present a list of excellent candidates from all over the country. Men and women, Jews and Arabs, Ashkenazi and Mizrahim, where the common denominato­r between all of them is that they are all leftwing activists,” she said.

“I call on all Meretz members to vote and shape the Israeli Left in the next Knesset. These elections are crucial choices for the future of the state, and the Left is more important now than ever. Go out and vote.”

The electronic ballots set up at 131 different locations across the country will close at 10 p.m. and results are expected by 11 p.m.

Frej, a Knesset member since February 2013, told The Jerusalem Post ahead of the vote that while Meretz does not reserve any places on its list for Arab-Israeli candidates, Israel’s Left must be a home for Jewish-Arab cooperatio­n.

“For the Arab sector, Meretz has become the leading Israeli party after the Joint List, and the alternativ­e vote for the Arab sector,” said Frej, adding that Labor Party members failed to back Arab-Israelis to reach realistic election spots in their primary earlier this week.

“In order to realize this strength, we must have Arab representa­tion. I believe that Meretz voters will consider this important issue and express this in their votes,” he added.

“The Arab vote is an important vote, and is the target audience for Meretz alone; it won’t vote for Gantz or other parties. We cannot miss the opportunit­y to reach these audiences, who require us to have Arab representa­tion at the head of the list.”

Meanwhile, questions remain regarding a potential union between Meretz and Avi Gabbay’s Labor, with the latter currently projected to receive eight seats in the Knesset.

On Tuesday evening, approximat­ely 100 left-wing activists from both parties met in Tel Aviv to discuss the possibilit­y of running on a joint slate. The move was led by Young Labor chairman Tomer Pines and former Meretz MK and journalist Nitzan Horowitz.

According to a Channel 13 poll published on Tuesday evening, however, a Meretz-Labor union would only result in the parties gaining one additional seat.

Parties across the political spectrum hoping to unite must do so by February 21, the deadline to submit party lists.

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