The Jewish Chronicle

Avi Gabbay’s inspiratio­n is not Macron but Blair

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

EVER SINCE Avi Gabbay came from nowhere and won the Israeli Labour Party leadership race on July 10, commentato­rs in Israel and abroad have been calling him “the Israeli Macron”.

In private, however, Mr Gabbay has said he is looking for inspiratio­n on the other side of the English Channel, from another formerly anonymous politician who surprising­ly became Labour leader 23 years ago this month: Tony Blair.

While Mr Macron formed a new centrist party in France, vanquishin­g the old parties of left and right on his way to the Elysée Palace, Mr Gabbay’s situation is much more reminiscen­t of that which faced the then newly elected leader of the Labour Party in 1994.

At that time, Labour had gone 15 years without holding office. A similar period has passed since the last Israeli Labour prime minister, Ehud Barak, lost to a Likud challenger.

Mr Gabbay has been studying the Blair strategy closely and believes his party should adopt two of the central tenets of the New Labour project — to move away from its left-wing image to the centre of the political map and to transform the party machine into an election-fighting platform. Israeli Labour has now lost six consecutiv­e elections and Mr Gabbay has already made the tactical decision to spend the next few weeks and months meeting voters in Likud territory — outside the Tel Aviv urban area — rather than shoring up the party’s old base.

He believes centre-left voters who, according to the polls, deserted Labour for Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid, will return the moment they believe Labour is a viable alternativ­e once again.

Surveys indicate that it is already working — Mr Gabbay’s Labour has already overtaken Yesh Atid in the polls, back in its traditiona­l second place. That, however, will not be enough to beat Benjamin Netanyahu. Since Mr Netanyahu returned to power in 2009, the right-wing-religious bloc has held a small but firm majority.

For any Labour candidate to become prime minister, bringing the voters home from Yesh Atid will not be enough: he will also have to shift two per cent of the right-leaning electorate to the centre-left bloc.

The Labour leader has overtaken Yair Lapid in the polls

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