The Jerusalem Post

Yair Lapid on new parties: ‘Centrists can’t be led by a hologram’

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid vowed on Sunday night to do everything possible to unite all centrist parties under his leadership ahead of the February 21 deadline for party lists to be submitted.

Speaking at a town hall meeting for some 5,000 English speakers in Tel Aviv, Lapid warned that if centrist parties do not unite for the April 9 election, “It’s going to be a disaster.” He said such mergers would not happen for a few more weeks.

“I am doing whatever I can to change this,” Lapid said. “In the last week or so, more people are looking at Yesh Atid and saying it’s a real thing, unlike holographi­c parties that you are not sure what they stand for. People realize the only party that can present a real fight for the Likud is one of substance. I don’t think we are going to hook up with the Left but there are enough parties in the Center to win an election. There is no alternativ­e to a real party with boots on the ground.”

Asked if he would relinquish the top slot on a list in order to defeat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he said he would run for prime minister as the

head of Yesh Atid.

“It’s not about being number one,” he said. “If you want to create real change in this country, you have to do it from the Prime Minister’s Office. With the real important issues unless you do it from the Prime Minister’s Office, you can’t have real change. It’s not about ego. It’s about how to create real change.”

Haaretz reported on Sunday that Lapid had stopped shifting his party to the Right and had intensifie­d negotiatio­ns with Hatnua head Tzipi Livni.

Lapid warned that due to what he called “huge profession­al mistakes” made by Netanyahu, Israel had become no longer a bipartisan issue in the United States. He singled out Netanyahu’s 2015 speech to Congress and Ambassador Ron Dermer joining billionair­e Sheldon Adelson to screen Republican candidates

for president.

He said “this polarizati­on is disastrous” and that by rejecting the Western Wall deal, the Israeli government turned off American Jews who could have helped.

Regarding rocket fire from Gaza, Lapid said it was unacceptab­le that the homes of citizens of the South have been destroyed and the homes of the heads of Hamas still stand.

“The toughest army in the Middle East is being defeated by a third-rate terrorist organizati­on,” he said. “We need to bring back deterrence.” •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? YAIR LAPID at a town hall event in Tel Aviv yesterday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) YAIR LAPID at a town hall event in Tel Aviv yesterday.

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