The Jerusalem Post

Balad nixed from race over opposition to Israel’s Jewish character

Decision by Election Committee likely to be overturned by High Court

- • By ELIAV BREUER

The Central Election Committee voted on Thursday to disqualify the Arab-Israeli Balad Party from running in the upcoming election, on the grounds that it opposed Israel’s definition as a Jewish state.

Ra’am, which was part of the outgoing Knesset’s coalition, also faced a similar appeal, but was given the green light to run.

Israeli law stipulates that a candidate list or individual may not participat­e in elections to the Knesset if its actions or platform include “negation of the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state; incitement to racism; support for armed struggle by a hostile state or by a terrorist organizati­on against the State of Israel.”

However, the decision to disqualify Balad is likely to be overturned in the High Court of Justice, which overturned a similar decision against the party in 2019. The debate and vote were therefore mostly declarativ­e and will most likely not affect the actual election.

The vote on Ra’am passed 14-0, with representa­tives of Likud, Religious Zionist Party, Yesh Atid, Labor, United Torah Judaism and Shas not present. The appeal against Balad, which was filed by a little-known political party called “Anachnu–Together for a New Social Order,” passed 9-5, with representa­tives of Yisrael Beytenu, Blue and White, New Hope, Derech Eretz, Yamina and National Unity voting in favor of blocking the party, and the representa­tives of Ra’am, the Joint List and Meretz voting against.

The Central Election Committee is headed by High Court Justice Yitzhak Amit but composed of representa­tives from all of the outgoing Knesset’s political parties. Derech Eretz broke away from New Hope, and “National Unity” in the outgoing Knesset is the name MKs Matan Kahana and Shirly Pinto chose for themselves after breaking away from Yamina, and joining the party with the same name for the upcoming election. The two are therefore represente­d independen­tly in the committee.

“The attempt this time to disqualify Balad is an attempt by [Defense Minister Benny] Gantz and [Prime Minister Yair] Lapid to configure Arab leadership according to their political needs,” Balad chairman MK Sami Abou Shahadeh said during the discussion.

Hadash-Ta’al also criticized the decision.

COMMUNICAT­IONS MINISTER Yoaz Hendel, a member of the committee representi­ng his Derech Eretz faction, said during the discussion, “While I was fighting in the Second Lebanon War, the founder of the party [Balad] and a serving Knesset member, Azmi Bishara, spied for Hezbollah, compromise­d the security of the country and fled to Qatar. The current chairman calls for the prime minister and the previous Prime Ministers to be prosecuted at the Hague [Internatio­nal Criminal Court] for thwarting terrorism in Judea and

Samaria.”

Hendel criticized the parties who boycotted the vote.

“I can’t understand how Zionist parties that have been sitting here in this building talked for a year [about the Arab parties] as supporters of terrorism, but when they have a strategic opportunit­y to change the presence of those extremist elements in the Israeli electoral system in the long term, they choose to take a step back out of egoistic, political, specific considerat­ions,” he said.

The Religious Zionist Party explained its absence from the votes after the fact. “The High Court became a political player who did and is doing everything to harm the Right, and continue the rule of the Left and the Arabs. We will bring the real change after the elections. We will outlaw the Arab parties supporting terrorism and put an end to the High Court’s rule,” it concluded.

While each party gave its own reasons for boycotting the vote, politics were also widely regarded as being a factor. Following the split between Balad and HadashTa’al on September 15, Balad currently is not close to passing the 3.25% election threshold. The party is affiliated with the anti-Netanyahu camp, and therefore the Likud and other opposition parties prefer that it runs in order for it to waste votes. Opposing the appeal against Balad would have been too brazen, and instead their representa­tives did not attend.

Similarly, current coalition parties such as Labor and Yesh Atid had an interest that Balad not run – and also did not appear at the vote, so as not to oppose the appeal. National Unity announced at the last minute that it supported the appeal.

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