Last week the Israeli Labour party suffered a nearly complete electoral annihilation. It lost three-quarters of its seats in the Israeli parliament, leaving it with just six out of the 120 in the chamber. Even Ed Miliband’s 2015 result in the UK elections, labelled Labour’s “most stunning defeat since 1983”, only saw him lose 10% of the seats held by Gordon Brown. Some in the international press have drawn comfort from the meteoric rise of Benny Gantz, a former Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) chief whose newly founded centrist party won 35 seats – exactly the same as sitting prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu’s party. But what many commentators have hailed as a serious challenge to Netanyahu was in fact a sign that a left-leaning administration in Jerusalem – and, consequently, the two-state solution – has never been further out of reach.
This electoral tie became Netanyahu’s fourth victory in a decade because of the way the Israeli political system works. In Israel, every prime minister is required to form a multi-party coalition to rule. And while Netanyahu could count on his “natural allies” – the ultra-orthodox and the settler parties – Gantz found himself a general without an army. With the Jewish left wiped out, and any cooperation with Arab parties ruled out in advance, his chance of forming a government – let alone a government not dominated by the far right – was doomed from the start. Consequently, Netanyahu’s new administration, to be appointed within a few weeks, will be the most rightwing in Israel’s history. It will include politicians who hold proudly racist views, of the kind who have yet to occupy key positions in government.
Continue reading...from The Guardian http://bit.ly/2UV5UI8
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