The Jerusalem Post

Labor revitalize­s, even if smaller than in the past

Early exit polls show party securing 6-7 seats

- ANALYSIS • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

Results from Tuesday night’s exit polls indicate that the Labor Party appeared to not only escape extinction, but to surprise by securing a “victory” of around seven seats in the Knesset. Prediction­s and polls showed them receiving fewer seats.

From 2015, Labor was led by Isaac Herzog and Avi Gabbay, both of whom led larger and more influentia­l parties, but who little by little allowed the country’s founding party to self-implode.

Amir Peretz came after Gabbay, and his alliance with Meretz reduced Labor’s power even more, bringing it only three seats in the last Knesset. At one point it appeared that he would formally combine with the Blue and White Party, ending Labor’s separate existence.

But current leader Merav Michaeli beat Peretz in a lawsuit and in inner-party competitio­n, as well as managing to rally back enough of Labor’s traditiona­l supporters to go into Election Day without the same worries about crossing the electoral threshold that Meretz and others had.

How did Michaeli – who until recently was a mid-level Labor MK with a distinguis­hed career as a journalist, but not necessaril­y expected to emerge as the party’s leader and savior – do it?

It appears that her return to bread-and-butter issues for the country’s left-leaning and socioecono­mic-focused part of the population, especially women, is what revitalize­d the party.

For sure, Michaeli is more in favor of compromise with the Palestinia­ns and more troubled by the settlement­s than the

country’s main right-wing parties. But this was not her campaign emphasis.

Rather, she highlighte­d improving healthcare, education, better protection­s for both maternity and paternity leave, a shorter work week, fighting domestic violence and a general return to focusing on social justice.

In terms of policy, Michaeli’s main difference from Peretz was that though they both loathe Netanyahu, Peretz was willing to join the recent national-unity government, and Michaeli was not.

However, on most policy issues they were probably similar. It seems Michaeli’s positives as an individual are what won her more votes than what Peretz might have gotten on his own.

Michaeli is careful to interspers­e

feminine pronouns as often as masculine ones when she speaks, and she made sure that the top 10 slots on her list were evenly split between men and women.

That being said, the idea that Labor winning seven seats is a “victory” says as much about how far the party has fallen as it does about Michaeli’s shortterm success.

In the long term, the party may still cease to exist if it cannot convince center-left voters who have defected successive­ly to Kadima, Yesh Atid, Blue and White and back to Yesh Atid that it can and will impact the country’s larger direction.

In the meantime, Michaeli’s likely best-case scenario is to be a minor player in a Yesh AtidNew Hope-Yamina-led government.

 ?? (Miriam Alster/Flash90) ?? LABOR PARTY Chairwoman Merav Michaeli, with partner Lior Schleien, votes in Tel Aviv yesterday.
(Miriam Alster/Flash90) LABOR PARTY Chairwoman Merav Michaeli, with partner Lior Schleien, votes in Tel Aviv yesterday.

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