The Jerusalem Post

Gantz, Lapid must boost Zionist muscular moderation together

- • By GIL TROY

For months, a terrible dilemma vexed four principled patriots. To Bibi or Not to Bibi, that was the question. When two decided to Bibi, and two decided not, their uneasy alliance blew up.

Yair Lapid and Bogie Ya’alon could not stomach working with Bibi, justifiabl­y. Benny Gantz and Gabi Ashkenazi could not bear standing by during a pandemic and electoral stalemate, understand­ably. So they divorced. But now, they must stop fuming and cooperate, working from within and without, united by a common vision of Zionist muscular moderation.

As deputy prime minister and defense minister, it should be easier for Gantz to make his mark, yet he risks losing his soul, like most people who have allied with Benjamin Netanyahu. As opposition leader, it will be easier for Lapid to maintain his integrity, yet he risks becoming irrelevant, like most people who have opposed Bibi.

Gantz should enter the government touting his exit plan, primed to blast any expression­s of bigotry, block any subversion of democracy, and boost Israeli unity during this crisis, which is why he chose to cooperate with Netanyahu. Now, before the Bibi-antics begin, Gantz and his allies must map out how to follow through on these moral issues which transcend politics.

First, Gantz must demonstrat­e zero-tolerance for demonizati­on and bigotry. Like a teacher handling a juvenile delinquent, Gantz should spell out for Netanyahu that at the first whiff of Arab-bashing, Gantz will object, privately at first, then increasing­ly loudly and vehemently. Persistent Arab-baiting will prompt Gantz’s party to disrupt business as usual, even contemplat­e resignatio­n, until the offenders apologize.

Lapid aptly notes that using “fear and hate as weapons in the battle of ideas” has been Netanyahu’s “unforgivab­le sin,” polarizing Israelis, leaving us more tolerant of intoleranc­e and intolerant of our fellow citizens. Gantz must not collaborat­e in such evils, while articulati­ng a critique as eloquent as Lapid’s.

Similarly, Netanyahu must stop his demagogic attacks on national institutio­ns and his subversive tricks to weaken Israeli democracy. Gantz must defend democracy from within, calling out divisive rhetoric, while sabotaging attempts to sabotage the Knesset, the courts and the police. He must be prepared: war-game likely scenarios, it’s going to happen.

Finally, with Gantz as defense minister and Ashkenazi as foreign minister, the two allies will occupy the two jobs beyond prime minister that most facilitate national unity. When we look beyond our borders, when we are attacked, or when our kids enlist, we bury our difference­s.

Constructi­ve tone-setting, true leadership, could start healing Israel from the Bibi years even before they end. For example, regardless of what they think about annexation, Gantz and Ashenazi cannot allow Netanyahu to use the corona crisis as a cover to force through such a dramatic move hastily.

Ultimately, this discussion is less about Israel’s image abroad; it’s about Israel’s soul - and Gantz’s.

IF GANTZ has to know when to fight and not just unite, Lapid has to know when to unite and not just fight. Lapid should study the greatest Israeli opposition leader, Menachem Begin, who had 29 years of practice. Begin believed that “without an opposition, there can be no democracy; without it, the essence of human liberty is in danger.” But he reassured Yitzhak Rabin and other prime ministers that “we both have the same goal. Despite the difference­s between us, we are one people.”

For most, such abstract paradoxes would confuse. But Lapid recently gave an important speech - “Only the Center Can Hold” drawing a blueprint for effective opposition and constructi­ve cooperatio­n with his former allies, carving a path forward toward the post-Bibi era (may it come speedily).

Rejecting the false choices between liberalism and nationalis­m, between democracy and Judaism, blasting right-wingers like Netanyahu who want “a Jewish state in which democracy is subservien­t to nationalis­m” and hyper-individual­ist left-wingers so hostile to nationalis­m they “would set us on the path to becoming a bi-national state,” Lapid boldly embraced the center. If “we take one of the sides, we lose our way,” he warned. Centrism offers the necessary balancing act.

Lapid understand­s “that we are complicate­d beings and that the role of government is to chart a course among the contradict­ions inherent in each of us as individual­s and as a collective.” He endorses what the Menachem Begin Center’s Paul Gross calls “an inclusive nationalis­m,” and what I call “muscular moderation.”

Resisting the lures of formulas, rejecting extremes, remaining principled, centrists sift, balance and juggle, seeking alliance and building consensus. Israeli centrism puts democracy front and center as a method and a value, while championin­g the Zionist building blocks that make Israel work: “community, tradition, historical memory, love of our homeland.”

This communal, centrist democracy “brings down... the walls isolating religious communitie­s” and “the significan­t walls of isolation of Western individual­ism…. We are not being asked to place our nation’s democratic identity before its national identity; we are choosing its democratic identity as the highest expression of its national identity.”

Lapid essentiall­y proclaims: Choose community, build unity, practice decency. Unlike most modern politician­s, Lapid offers a vision not just a strategy. By working together, Mr. Outside and Mr. Inside, Lapid and Gantz, can do what they failed to do during three campaigns: move beyond ABB - anybody but Bibi - to the ABCs of a nuanced, centrist approach ushering in a new era flourishin­g thanks to our old values. To achieve that, they’ll have to work together, albeit separately, and work hard separately, to keep us together.

The writer is the author of the newly-released The Zionist Ideas, an updated expansion of Arthur Hertzberg’s classic anthology The Zionist Idea; a 2019 National Jewish Book Award finalist; a distinguis­hed scholar of North American history at McGill University; and the author of 10 books on American history, including Leading from the Center: Why Moderates Make the Best Presidents.

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(Reuters) ISRAELI SOLDIERS mark Independen­ce Day.
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