Malta Independent

Netanyahu courts Arab voters in election-year turnabout

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has spent much of his long career casting Israel’s Arab minority as a potential fifth column led by terrorist sympathize­rs, is now openly courting their support as he seeks reelection in the country’s fourth vote in less than two years.

Few Arabs are likely to heed his call, underscori­ng the desperatio­n of Netanyahu’s political somersault. But the relative absence of incitement against the community in this campaign and the potential breakup of an Arab party alliance could dampen turnout — to Netanyahu’s advantage. He might even pick up just enough votes to swing a tight election.

Either way, Netanyahu’s overtures have shaken up the Arab community. The Joint List, an alliance of Arab parties that secured a record 15 seats in the 120-member Knesset last March, is riven by a dispute over whether it should work with Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud at a time when less objectiona­ble center-left parties are in disarray.

Its demise would leave the community with even less representa­tion as it confronts a terrifying crime wave, coronaviru­s-fueled unemployme­nt and persistent inequality. But given the complexiti­es of Israel’s coalition system, a breakaway Arab party could gain outsized influence if it is willing to work with Netanyahu or other traditiona­lly hostile leaders.

The struggle was on vivid display last week when Netanyahu traveled to Nazareth, the largest Arab-majority city in Israel, his third visit to an Arab district in less than two weeks. Outside the venue, dozens of people, including a number of Arab members of parliament, protested his visit and scuffled with police, even as the city’s mayor welcomed and praised him.

“Netanyahu came like a thief to try to scrape together votes from the Arab street,” said Aida Touma-Suleiman, a prominent lawmaker from the Joint List. “Your attempt to dismantle our community from within won’t succeed.”

Arabs make up around 20% of Israel’s population. They have full citizenshi­p, including the right to vote, and have a large and growing presence in universiti­es, the health care sector and other profession­s. But they face widespread discrimina­tion and blame lax Israeli law enforcemen­t for a rising wave of violent crime in their communitie­s.

They have close familial ties to Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, and largely identify with their cause. That has led many Jews to view them as sympatheti­c to Israel’s enemies, sentiments fanned by Netanyahu and other right-wing politician­s.

On the eve of elections in 2015, Netanyahu warned his supporters that Arabs were voting in “droves.” During back-to-back elections in 2019, his campaign sent poll observers to Arab districts and pushed for cameras in voting booths, in what critics said was a ploy to intimidate Arab voters and whip up false allegation­s of election fraud.

Those moves backfired spectacula­rly.

The Joint List, an unwieldy alliance of Islamists, communists and other leftists, boosted turnout and emerged as one of the largest blocs in parliament. At times, it looked like it might help deny Netanyahu a majority coalition or even emerge as the official opposition.

But last May, after three deadlocked elections in less than a year, Netanyahu formed a coalition with his main rival and the Joint List was left out in the cold. In the coming election, polls indicate a coalition of right-wing and centrist parties committed to ending Netanyahu’s nearly 12year rule would be able to oust him without the Arab bloc.

No Arab party has ever asked or been invited to join a ruling coalition.

In Nazareth, Netanyahu claimed his remarks in 2015 were misinterpr­eted — that he was merely warning Arab voters not to support the Joint List.

“All Israel’s citizens, Jews and Arabs alike, must vote,” he said. In other Arab towns, he has visited coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n centers, boasting about his success in securing millions of doses and encouragin­g residents to get inoculated.

Netanyahu’s Arab outreach seems to have given a green light to centrist and left-leaning politician­s to do the same, with less concern that their right-wing rivals will use it against them. Opposition leader Yair Lapid, Netanyahu’s main center-left opponent, said over the weekend that he was open to forming a government with external support from the Joint List.

The Joint List is meanwhile showing signs of breaking up.

Mansour Abbas, the head of an Islamist party, has expressed openness in recent months to working with Netanyahu to address issues like housing and law enforcemen­t. An aide to Abbas declined requests for an interview.

A full-scale breakup of the Joint List could further reduce turnout and potentiall­y leave one or more of its four parties with too little support to cross the electoral threshold.

Thabet Abu Rass, the co-director of the Abraham Initiative­s, which works to promote equality among Jews and Arabs, says Netanyahu may attract a small number of Arab voters, but that far more of them would simply boycott the election.

“They are waiting to see if there is going to be a Joint List or not, and if you ask me, it’s not going to happen,” he said. “There are a lot of deep difference­s this time.”

A poll carried out in December forecast Arab turnout at around 55%, far lower than the 65% seen last March.

Although Arab parties have historical­ly performed worse on their own, some feel the parties might be more effective individual­ly. In Israel’s political system — which requires would-be prime ministers to assemble majority coalitions — small parties often wield outsized influence.

“When we speak about the Palestinia­n community in Israel, we don’t speak about one bloc, we have different ideologies,” said Nijmeh Ali, a policy analyst at Al-Shabaka, an internatio­nal Palestinia­n think tank. “Sometimes you need to break up in order to gain power.”

Netanyahu appears to be focused on the margins ahead of a tight race that could determine not only whether he remains in office, but whether he secures immunity from prosecutio­n on multiple corruption charges. With only a few seats, a pragmatic politician like Abbas could determine Netanyahu’s fate.

“This is the new thing in Arab politics,” said Arik Rudnitzky, a research fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute. “They are ready to hold direct negotiatio­ns with Likud.”

He said it doesn’t mean they will be part of a governing coalition, but they could offer outside support to secure benefits for the Arab public. “It might be a winwin situation,” he said.

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