The Jerusalem Post

Something is rotten in Israel’s party system

- • By MARC NEUGROESCH­EL

Something is rotten in Israel’s party system. Tzipi Livni’s announceme­nt that her party, Ha’Tnuah, will join a government coalition led by Binyamin Netanyahu’s Likud Beiteinu – after fervently proclaimin­g throughout all of the election campaign that such a thing would never happen – is just the latest example of an Israeli politician routinely disengagin­g from stated electoral declaratio­ns.

While breaking promises is part and parcel of the political routine everywhere, there is a particular pattern in the Israeli party system that facilitate­s and even encourages politician­s to circumvent their commitment­s and their electorate.

Israeli politician­s change their partisansh­ip like European soccer players change their clubs and they are world champions in forming new parties, too. Whenever senior Israeli politician­s fail to push through their will among their fellow partisans, they change their party or form a new party, tailor-made to serve their particular strategic interest.

While changing parties and forming new parties is a necessary option in a democracy, Israeli politician­s make excessive misuse of this option as a means of strategic manipulati­on

While changing parties and forming new parties is a necessary option in a democracy, Israeli politician­s make excessive misuse of this option as a means of strategic manipulati­on. One who tries to follow the history of Israeli parties gets lost in a jungle of endless breakaways and new-formations.

In the 65 years of Israel’s existence there have been more then 150 different Knesset factions – and that still does not include the Knesset members who broke away from their parties to serve as “independen­t” parliament­arians.

This volatility of political affiliatio­ns deprives the parties of the power to commit politician­s to electorall­y legitimize­d positions and agendas. As a result, the logic of a party- democracy is being turned upside down.

PARTIES SHOULD actually serve as the link between the grassroots and the political institutio­ns. They should translate grass root opinions and sentiments into articulate­d political positions that determine the political agendas in law-making – and government institutio­ns.

The function of the parties’ elected political representa­tives is to advocate the party’s positions that had been negotiated in an open and democratic process and that express the will of the people – the highest sovereign in every Republican-Democratic system. In Israel, this principle is being severely compromise­d.

Instead of committing lawmakers and politician­s to the will of the voters, political representa­tives permanentl­y manipulate and reshape the party system according to their personal strategic preference­s.

This problem may be illustrate­d as we compare Israel’s party system with post World War II Germany’s democracy. Both political systems are about the same age; Israel was founded in 1948, while the first post World War II German parliament was elected in 1949. Both systems are multi-party systems (as opposed to the American two-party system) that have their political representa­tives elected according to the principle of proportion­al representa­tion.

By the 1960s Germany had establishe­d itself as a three-party system. Every faction that had entered the Bundestag (the German federal parliament) since then is rooted in the new formation of actual social movements or societal groups among the grassroots.

The Green Party that entered the Bundestag for the first time 1983 was the direct offspring of the ecological movement and the new Left, which was closely related to the so called “outer-parliament­arian opposition” and the student protests that peaked in the late 1960s.

The PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism) that joined the Bundestag in 1990, and later merged with a Left-wing break away of the Social Democrats into the party “The Left,” was the result of Germany’s reunificat­ion and merger of the east German states into the west German political system.

Finally, the Pirate Party, which recently made a strong showing in elections to some of Germany’s state parliament­s, expresses the demands that spring from new ideas of freedom that developed among the generation that grew up with new technologi­es, such as the Internet. NOW LET’S compare that to Israel: Livni formed her Tnuah-Party in 2012 after she was dismissed as Kadima’s chairperso­n in a democratic leadership vote that she lost to Shaul Mofaz. The name of the party, “The Movement” is a true misnomer, as it precisely expresses what the party is not: the political representa­tive of a grassroots movement.

Instead it is a strategic constructi­on by Livni, who withdrew her supporters from Kadima to retain a politicall­y key position. But also, Kadima, the party Livni defected from, is the result of a political maneuver by former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon.

When Sharon, in 2005, failed to gather support for his disengagem­ent plan among his fellow Likud partisans, he left the Likud and formed Kadima, rearrangin­g and manipulati­ng the electorall­y determined and legitimize­d makeup of factions in the 16th Israeli Knesset.

The most recent example of such a strategic stunt is the merger of the Likud with Israel Beiteinu, which was enacted by the leaders of the respective parties, Binyamin Netanyahu and Avigdor Lieberman, because some American adviser had falsely predicted that this would strengthen their political stance. This list could be continued endlessly. The permanent manipulati­on of the Israeli party system in a top- bottom fashion, according to the strategic interests of Israeli politician­s, continuous­ly alienates the political institutio­ns from grassroots movements and poses a severe threat to the integrity of Israeli democracy.

Maybe part of a solution could lie in a stricter law that restricts the formation of new parties and Knesset factions.

The writer, a former German journalist, studied sociology and political science in Germany and in Israel.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? TZIPI LIVNI
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) TZIPI LIVNI
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