The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­n state sidelined in new political map

- ANALYSIS • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Arab-Israelis now face a Solomonic choice of advancing their own domestic agenda by joining a government coalition or by refusing to do so by insisting on a two-state resolution at the pre-1967 lines.

The phrase that politics makes strange bedfellows has never been more true than when viewing the coalition possibilit­ies available to prime ministeria­l hopefuls who must form a 61-seat coalition to govern.

Gone are the neat Left and Right blocs. Any coalition possibilit­y, save one, would truly be like the lion lying down with the lamb.

There is no topic for which this is more true than the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. It’s a sign of how unlikely a peace process seems that politician­s are now debating a government with politician­s on the Left who want two-states at the pre-1967 lines and those on the Right who do not believe in a Palestinia­n state at all.

The election might have given right-wing and Center-Right parties 72 seats; enough to advance any right-wing agenda. Diplomatic constraint­s and internal divisions on the Right have made that impossible.

Political hatred of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu across the board, however, has therefore divided the map into those who hate Bibi and those who love him.

The anti-and pro-Netanyahu calibratio­n, however is likely to stymie the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, irrespecti­ve of whether the right-wing Netanyahu or the Center-Left Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid forms a government.

Both Netanyahu and Lapid fall short within their own camps and the kingmakers are on the extreme Right and Left of the map. The pressure is on because no one wants to head to a fifth cycle of elections within a three year span.

The chief kingmaker is the United Arab List’s (Ra’am) head Mansour Abbas, who has indicated his willingnes­s to sit in, or to support from the outside, a coalition led either by Netanyahu or Lapid. The other Arab-Israeli party – the Joint List – is also willing to do this with Lapid, who could similarly be dependent on its seats.

It’s historic moment for Arab-Israeli parties typically isolated in the periphery of the political map, which have already indicated that they would not make the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict one of their red lines.

Here are six reasons they are free to temporaril­y place the conflict on the back burner.

Almost no support for ’67 lines

If one thinks of the elections as a reflection of the country’s ideologica­l beliefs, then there is very little support for a twostate resolution along the pre1967 lines.

Only three parties support that position, Ra’am, the Joint List and Meretz. Between them they have only 16 seats. This means that 104 seats have gone to parties that oppose the 1967 lines as the boundaries of a twostate resolution to the conflict.

This means that from the start, Ra’am and the Joint List have little support for any hardline demand for a two-state resolution at the pre-1967 lines.

Even a scenario of two-states based on the settlement blocs, would only muster an additional 32 seats: Yesh Atid with its 17 seats, Blue and White with 8 and Labor with 7, and even then, Blue and White might want Israel to retain additional territory beyond the settlement blocs.

Yamina, New Hope can block a Palestinia­n state

The Ra’am Party is not the only kingmaker in town.

Neither Netanyahu or Lapid can form a government without at least one, if not both, of the right-wing Yamina and New Hope parties.

Neither party supports a Palestinia­n state, even a demilitari­zed one. One, if not both, could be in either a Lapid- or Netanyahu-led government. They would effectivel­y block any two-state initiative from moving forward, thereby making any chance of such a final status resolution to the conflict almost impossible for either a Lapid- or Netanyahu-led government.

A Lapid government is likely temporary

Lapid’s bloc of left-wing and centrist parties that are more compatible ideologica­lly – Yesh Atid at 17, Blue and White at eight, Labor at seven, Meretz at six – comes out to only 38 seats.

Lapid would have to turn rightward, looking at the Center-Right party of Yisrael Beytenu at seven and the rightwing parties of Yamina, also at seven, and New Hope at six to form a coalition; and even then would only have a total of 59 seats, two short of what is needed.

He would then need to consider at least one of the Arab-Israeli parties. Even if he went the other way and formed a government with both the Arab-Israeli parties, he would need some combinatio­n of Center-Right and right-wing parties.

Such a government made up by parties with such diametrica­lly opposite agendas, bound only by a joint desire to oust Netanyahu. A Lapid-led government, therefore is not predicted to last long enough to even engage in a peace process.

So no need to be overly concerned about its platform.

Later, in the next round of elections when it matters more, they can make that a red-line demand, rather than wasting on a government likely to fall apart within months.

Netanyahu has outside support from the Right

The largest ideologica­l bloc is on the Right and not the Left of the political map. The election left Israel with a 72-seat bloc of politician­s who largely agree on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. This includes Likud, Shas, United Torah Judaism, the Religious Zionist Party, Yamina, New Hope and Yisrael Beytenu.

Netanyahu’s issues are that three of the right-wing and Center-Right parties don’t want to sit in his government, a move which leaves him short of the necessary 61 seats. Here is hoping to sway Yamina to join his coalition and to rely on Ra’am either from inside or outside the coalition.

Here, Ra’am would make the most active trade, because it would prop up a government that could unofficial­ly rely on Yamina, New Hope and Yisrael Beytenu to advance a rightwing agenda. But its also a government more unified ideologica­lly that could be in place long enough so that it could produce results because the parties within it, save for Ra’am, would be more or less aligned

Right likely to be constraine­d diplomatic­ally

Ra’am can’t sway a Netanyahu led government to adopt its agenda with respect to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, but it also doesn’t have to worry about preventing major rightwing initiative­s either.

Netanyahu’s hands are tied diplomatic­ally irrespecti­ve of the make-up of his government. He already agreed last year to suspend his drive to annex West Bank settlement­s in exchange for normalized ties with Arab states under the rubric of the US-brokered Abraham Accords. All right-wing parties, save for the Religious Zionist Party, have agreed to honor this suspension.

Concern for US President Joe Biden’s reaction would

also likely act as a constraini­ng factor with respect to actions in the West Bank, particular­ly settlement building. The Biden administra­tion has also spoken out against Israeli unilateral steps, including settlement building and the demolition of Palestinia­n homes.

There is no active peace process

Israeli-Palestinia­n talks have been frozen since 2014. Former US president Donald Trump’s 2020 plan for two states was rejected by the Palestinia­ns and shelved by the Biden administra­tion.

The US has traditiona­lly been the main broker of any Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process.

Since taking office in January, however, Biden has not put forward any plan nor has he promised to do so. The issue has appeared to be on his back burner, particular­ly in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. US officials speak of the importance of preserving the option for a two-state solution, but it is presumed they will not do so in the near future.

Even if Biden had a peace plan in his pocket and there was an Israeli leader ready to move on it, the situation would be on hold because the Palestinia­ns in July are holding their first leadership elections since 2005. It could mark the end of Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ 16-year rule.

The outcome of those elections as well as the ones for the Palestinia­n Legislativ­e Council in May, would be significan­t in setting the course for any future peace process and nothing will happen until they are completed.

It would be hard for Arab-Israeli politician­s for whom the current political stalemate in Israel offers an unpreceden­ted window to advance domestic issues, to fall on their swords on behalf of a process for which there is no plan, no vision and no leadership for such a plan.

Insisting on a two-state solution now would be akin to inviting guests to dinner when the refrigerat­or and kitchen cupboards are bare.

 ?? (Flash90) ?? UNITED ARAB LIST Party leader Mansour Abbas (center) addresses supporters at the party’s headquarte­rs in Tamra on election night last month.
(Flash90) UNITED ARAB LIST Party leader Mansour Abbas (center) addresses supporters at the party’s headquarte­rs in Tamra on election night last month.

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