Israel – Tzipi Livni: We Failed To Agree Against ‘Extreme’ Netanyahu Gov’t

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    Israeli head of the Hatnuah party Tzipi Livni during election tour in the western wall in the in the old city of Jerusalem, Jan 3, 2013. Photo by FLASH90Israel – Three Israeli centrist and left-leaning parties have failed in an initial attempt to form a united bloc that might have cut into Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s opinion poll lead before the January 22 election.

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    “We didn’t reach any agreement, unfortunately,” centrist Hatenuah party chief Tzipi Livni told Israel Radio on Monday after she took part in a late-night meeting on Sunday with the heads of the centrist Yesh Atid and left-leaning Labour parties.

    Livni, a former foreign minister and peace negotiator with the Palestinians, declined to discuss details of the negotiations but said she still hoped the three parties could achieve a unity pact.

    Opinion polls predict that Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, running in the election in partnership with the nationalist Yisrael Beitenu faction led by former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, will easily win the national ballot.

    Livni said a joint center-left campaign would have attracted enough undecided voters, seeking an alternative to Netanyahu, to create a bloc of more than 40 seats in the 120-member parliament, topping the 37 forecast for Likud-Yisrael Beitenu.

    Polls predict the three parties running separately will amass seats that number only in the mid-30s.

    In the election, Israelis vote for a party’s list of parliament, and no one faction has ever won a majority in the legislature.

    After the ballot, Israel’s president chooses a party leader to try to put together a governing coalition. That is usually, but not always, the head of the party that won the most parliamentary seats.

    Netanyahu has used the prospect of a center-left union to try to win back support from traditional Likud backers who opinion polls show intend to vote for Bayit Yehudi, a far-right party led by Naftali Bennett, a former settler leader who wants to annex parts of the occupied West Bank.

    “Against the left-wing bloc, you need a large Likud-Yisrael Beitenu,” Netanyahu said repeatedly at a campaign event late on Sunday – a party held for hundreds of young Likud supporters at a Tel Aviv night club.

    Livni has proposed that Hatenuah, Yesh Atid and Labour, should they form a bloc but lose the election, consider joining a Netanyahu-led government as an alternative to smaller religious parties and Bayit Yehudi, which has surged in recent polls.

    Labour party head Shelly Yachimovich, in a separate Israel Radio interview, ruled that out.

    “Whoever thinks that you can change Netanyahu from inside, meaning by sitting next to the driver’s seat and pressing the brakes … is misleading the public. As long as Netanyahu is prime minister, nothing will change,” she said.


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    bored
    bored
    11 years ago

    I was hoping the picture of her by the wall would have her in tephilin leining. Oh well. Anyone got photoshop?