H. Schenker: Elections Report from Tel Aviv
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Israel and Overseas: Israeli Election Primer 2015 (As Of, January 27, 2015) Elections • in Israel, Elections for the Knesset A
Israel and Overseas: Israeli Election Primer 2015 (As of, January 27, 2015) Elections In Israel, elections for the Knesset are held at least every four years. As is frequently the case, the outgoing government coalition collapsed due to disagreements between the parties. As a result, the Knesset fell significantly short of seeing out its full four year term. Knesset elections in Israel will now be held on March 17, 2015, slightly over two years since the last time that this occurred. The Basics of the Israeli Electoral System All Israeli citizens above the age of 18 and currently in the country are eligible to vote. Voters simply select one political party. Votes are tallied and each party is then basically awarded the same percentage of Knesset seats as the percentage of votes that it received. So a party that wins 10% of total votes, receives 10% of the seats in the Knesset (In other words, they would win 12, out of a total of 120 seats). To discourage small parties, the law was recently amended and now the votes of any party that does not win at least 3.25% of the total (probably around 130,000 votes) are completely discarded and that party will not receive any seats. (Until recently, the “electoral threshold,” as it is known, was only 2%). For the upcoming elections, by January 29, each party must submit a numbered list of its candidates, which cannot later be altered. So a party that receives 10 seats will send to the Knesset the top 10 people listed on its pre-submitted list. -
THE STATE of ISRAEL 70 YEARS of INDEPENDENCE - Building a Nation
1 The Zionist General Council Session XXXVII/4 THE STATE OF ISRAEL 70 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE - Building a Nation October 2018 2 Plenary No. 1 - Opening of the Zionist General Council Session Eli Cohen opened the first session and thanked the members of the audit committee and praised the auditor and his team, who - in their attempt to reach a level of satisfaction, which all can find to be acceptable - see all the flaws and improvements. Rabbi Yehiel Wasserman was invited to the stage for a ceremony conferring honorary fellowships to various members for their activities in the Zionist movement and their significant contribution to shaping its path and activities. This year, thanks to the WZO’s extensive activity over the past decade, quite a few people will be receiving this status. Honorary fellows are highly motivated individuals who have devoted many years of their time to the Zionist movement and who are role models for the next generation. Rabbi Wasserman then thanked the members of the Committee for Honorary Fellows: Barbara Goldstein, Silvio Joskowicz, Dalia Levy, Karma Cohen, Hernan Felman, Jacques Kupfer and Nava Avissar, the committee’s coordinator, for their dedicated work. Honorary Fellows: Mrs. Ana Marlene Starec – Mrs. Starec has been active in the Zionist movement for the past 54 years. She has been serving as Honorary President of WIZO for many years now and is also engaged in advocacy activities for Israel in the Diaspora in general, and with the Jewish communities of Brazil, in particular. Her human rights activities earned her a medal from the state of Rio de Janeiro, and she has also received a medal from the French Senate for her activities for humanity. -
NGO Comments on the Initial Israeli State Report on Implementing the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
NGO Comments on the Initial Israeli State Report on Implementing the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A Mixed Bag: Lawmaking to Promote Children’s Rights, Ongoing Discrimination, and Many Serious Violations ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Prepared for the Pre-sessional Working Group UN Committee on the Rights of the Child – 31st Session by Defense for Children International – Israel Section in consultation with members of The Israeli Children's Rights Coalition April 2002 DCI-Israel and Coalition page 2 NGO Report This NGO Report was prepared by Defense for Children International – Israel in consultation with members of the Israeli Children’s Rights Coalition. However, this report represents the views of DCI – Israel alone. Members of the Israel Children’s Rights Coalition do not necessarily support all aspects of the Report. A preliminary draft report written by Hephzibah Levine was circulated among coalition members. The contributions and comments by members of the Israel Children’s Rights Coalition have been integrated into the report by Dr. Philip Veerman, who also did a systematic analysis of the implementation of all of the articles of the CRC, further research and rewriting. Radda Barnen (Swedish Save the Children) and the Haella Foundation in the Netherlands contributed financial support for the production of this report by DCI – Israel in cooperation with the NGO’s. ISBN 965-90445-0-X © All Rights Reserved by Defense for Children International-Israel, Jerusalem, 2002 Deposited at the Register of Publications in the Israel Center for Libraries, Bnai Brak. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher, the Israel section of Defense for Children International, (DCI- Israel) P.O Box 8028, Jerusalem, 92384, Israel. -
Contributor Biographies
155 Contributor Biographies Rabbi Rachel Adler, PhD, is the Ellenson Professor of Modern Jewish Thought at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. She was one of the first to bring feminist perspectives to bear on Jewish texts and law. Her book Engendering Judaism (1998) is the first by a female theologian to win a National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Thought. Hadeel Azzam-Jalajel, who was raised in Nazareth, was at the time of writing this essay co-director of the Racism Crisis Center and a lawyer with a private legal practice. She is a grad- uate of the Law School of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She interned at the civil rights organization Hamoked: Center for the Defense of the Individual, and since passing the bar in March of 2014, she has focused on administrative and constitu- tional law. Hadeel is a social and political activist, and a member of the leadership of the Jewish-Arab movement Standing Together, which works to promote peace, equality, and social justice. She also works as a content manager in both Hebrew and Arabic for the movement. Ruth Calderon, PhD, is a former member of the Israeli Knesset, former vice-speaker of the Knesset of the opposition party Yesh Atid, a Jewish educator, and Talmud scholar. In 1989, she founded Beit Midrash ELUL and, in 1996, the secular Beit Midrash for He- brew Culture, ALMA. She served as the head of the Division for Culture and Education of the Israeli National Library and on the faculty of the Mandel Institute for Nonprofit Leadership, where she also belonged to the first cohort of students to finish the program. -
September 20
Israeli Elections Bulletin | September 20 On 17 September Israelis voted for the second time in five months. Our final bulletin analyses the results and asks what happens next. Final Election Results Netanyahu fails to win 61 seat majority With nearly 100 per cent of the votes counted in the Israeli general election, Benny Gantz’s Blue and White party beat Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud by two seats (33-31), Avigdor Liberman’s Yisrael Beitenu party won 8 seats, compared to 5 in April, retaining its position as the kingmaker of any future coalition. Overall the centre-left/Arab bloc of parties outperformed the right-wing/ultra- Orthodox bloc by two seats - 57 to 55 with Lieberman’s party currently on the fence. 69.4 per cent of eligible voters turned out to vote, an increase of 1.5 per cent compared to April’s election. The key results of the election were the surge in support for Lieberman which was likely fuelled by moderate right-wing voters, perhaps previous Kulanu voters, who decided not to support Likud. The increased support for Arab parties was also crucial and voter turnout in Arab communities was much higher, at 60 per cent compared to 49 per cent in April. It’s possible the higher voter turnout was a reaction to Netanyahu’s proposal to put cameras in polling stations in Arab communities and his repeated allegations of Arab voter fraud. Netanyahu’s call yesterday for immediate national unity talks with Gantz were rebuffed by the Blue and White leader, who declared victory and said his party would “not be dictated to.” Gantz re-stated his intention to form a broad and liberal unity government. -
Election Wrap-Up: Was the 2019 Campaign Meretz's Last?
Election Wrap-up: Was the 2019 Campaign Meretz’s Last? Return to Israel Horizons main page At first glance, Israel’s April 9, 2019 Knesset elections seemed to produce little change from the standpoint of Meretz, the party apparently ending the 2019 campaign with four seats (barely missing a fifth). True, that’s a drop of one compared to the five it had in the outgoing Knesset, but its losses were trivial compared to the Labor Party’s catastrophic 18-seat freefall, which came amid the mass migration of center-left voters to former Chief of Staff Benny Gantz’s new Blue and White party (Israel’s latest centrist flavor of the month). What’s more, just like last time, Meretz is headed for the opposition benches, where it will do all it can to minimize the ravages of what is shaping up to be another right-wing/religious/Haredi government led by Binyamin Netanyahu. And the faces won’t be new, either: Meretz’s four incoming Knesset members are all incumbents – Tamar Zandberg, Ilan Gilon, Michal Rozin, and Esawi Freige – back to serve an additional term. But probe a little deeper, and one can see that the results of this election could be the harbinger of some dramatic shifts, especially with regard to the still-taboo possibility of sweeping Jewish-Arab integration in Israeli politics. Party leader Zandberg hinted at the possible new direction when she addressed Meretz activists on election night, following the publication of the exit polls: “The future of the Israeli left,” she said, “is Jewish-Arab partnership … Unless Israeli politics treats all the country’s citizens equally, there’s no future.” Days later, as the dust settled, Zandberg elaborated on the message, writing in an e-blast to supporters that a “new Israeli left … must include true Jewish-Arab partnership – social, civil, and political” [emphasis added]. -
In Contemporary Israeli Politics and the Israel-Palestinian Conflict
The "ethnic-split" in contemporary Israeli Politics and the Israel-Palestinian Conflict Roy Duer January 5th, 2016 Contents Introduction...........................................................................................................................3 1. Intergroup Relations in Israeli Society……......................................................................9 Ashkenazi-Mizrahi Relations............................................................................................9 Early relations and Mizrahi marginalization..................................................................9 Social Identity Theory – Mizrahi Protest and Assimilation.........................................10 Current Mizrahi Subjective Belief Structure...............................................................12 Mizrahi-Arab Relations...................................................................................................14 Early Capitalizing on the Ethnic Dimension of Israeli Society.......................................16 The Consolidation of Israeli-Mizrahi Identity.................................................................21 2. Israel's Political System in the Increasing Discursive Battle……..................................25 Ethno-National and Liberal Attitudes since the 2009 Elections......................................26 Netanyahu's Tenure – Winning Three Elections..............................................................29 The 2009 Elections......................................................................................................29 -
The Representation of Women in Israeli Politics
10E hy is it important for women to be represented in the Perspective A Comparative Politics: in Israeli Women of Representation The WKnesset and in cabinet? Are women who are elected The Representation of to these institutions expected to do more to promote “female” interests than their male counterparts? What are the factors influencing the representation of women in Israeli politics? How Women in Israeli Politics has their representation changed over the years, and would the imposition of quotas be a good idea? A Comparative Perspective This policy paper examines the representation of women in Israeli politics from a comparative perspective. Its guiding premise is that women’s representation in politics, and particularly in legislative bodies, is of great importance in that it is tightly bound to liberal and democratic principles. According to some researchers, it is also important because female legislators Policy Paper 10E advance “female” issues more than male legislators do. While there has been a noticeable improvement in the representation of women in Israeli politics over the years, the situation in Israel is still fairly poor in this regard. This paper Assaf Shapira | Ofer Kenig | Chen Friedberg | looks at the impact of this situation on women’s status and Reut Itzkovitch-Malka gender equality in Israeli society, and offers recommendations for improving women’s representation in politics. The steps recommended are well-accepted in many democracies around the world, but have yet to be tried in Israel. Why is it important for women to be Assaf Shapira | Ofer Kenig | Chen Friedberg | Reut Itzkovitch-Malka Friedberg | Chen | Ofer Kenig Shapira Assaf This publication is an English translation of a policy paper represented in the Knesset and in cabinet? published in Hebrew in August 2013, which was produced by Are women who are elected to these the Israel Democracy Institute’s “Political Reform Project,” led by Prof. -
About the Social Alliance
About the Social Alliance The economic approach promoted by the Israeli government increased social disparities, eroded the middle class and exacerbated poverty. As of 2013, public expenditure, excluding defense expenditures and interest payments, amounts to 32.4% of Israel's GDP, while the OECD average is 44.1%. Most of the increase in poverty that was created in the last 15 years is among working families. The initiative to establish the social alliance was born out of a strong need in many parts of the population in creating an alternative to the current socio-economic policy in Israel. Despite the fact that the socio-economic discourse has increased since the social protest of summer 2011, the debate was not expanded enough for the needs of the public. Therefore, in the past few months, the Macro Center for Political Economics, in collaboration with the Israeli office of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, dealt with the establishment of the Israeli social alliance. Leading organizations in various fields will take part in the social alliance, in order to improve the socio-economic future of the country's citizens. We approached organizations and individuals from different fields, each with a touch in various fields related to Israel's society and economy. There is no doubt that on the public agenda there are issues that require thorough treatment and we believe that it can be promoted with the cooperation of the various parties. The course of action is to create a melting pot which will bring change around a common platform. We invited people and organizations from across the social and economic political spectrum, to take part in the discussion on the future of Israel. -
In This Issue: Universal Support for Future of Har Hazeitim
International Committee for Har Hazeitim INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR UPDATEWinter 2018 The International Historic Cemetery of the Jewish People THE HISTORIC MISSION In This Issue: Universal Support for Future of Har Hazeitim........................................................................................................................................... pg 1 Israel’s Chief Rabbis Yosef and Lau......................................................................................................................................................................... pg 2-3 Waldorf Dinner Launches Mission.......................................................................................................................................................................... pg 2-3 High Level Tour of Har Hazeitim.............................................................................................................................................................................. pg 4-5 Luncheon Reception at the Wall with Rabbi and Deputy Mayor......................................................................................... pg 5 The Key Moment: Inauguration of the Knesset Caucus............................................................................................................... pg 5-6 Prime Minister Netanyahu: “Har Hazeitim is THE Mountain!”.............................................................................................. pg 7 President Rivlin: Personal with Har Hazeitim........................................................................................................................................... -
Torah from Congregation B’Nai Jacob Name of Business: Family Diplomacy: a Collaborative Law Firm in Ottumwa, IA, Shown Location: 412 E
St. Petersburg, FL 33707 St. Petersburg, FL Avenue 6416 Central Tampa Jewish Press of Inc. Bay, Tampa The Jewish Press Group of www.jewishpresstampa.com VOL. 31, NO. 5 TAMPA, FLORIDA A SEPTEMBER 20 - OCTOBER 4, 2018 16 PAGES Israel to accept more Ethiopian The Jewish Press Group U.S. POSTAGE PAID U.S. POSTAGE of Tampa Bay, Inc. Bay, Tampa of PRESORTED Falash Mura STANDARD JERUSALEM (JTA) – Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanya- hu announced that he has decided to bring some 1,000 Ethiopian Falash Mura who have children living in Israel to the country. Netanyahu made the announce- ment on Monday, Sept. 17, at a JustJust CompliedaaComplied nosh..fromnosh.. from news news wires wires meeting of the Ministerial Commit- Cleveland Browns sign Jewish kicker tee on the Advancement and Inte- The Cleveland Browns have signed kicker Greg Jo- gration of Israeli Citizens of Ethio- seph, who played football and soccer at the Donna Klein pian Origin. Jewish Academy in Boca Raton. Joseph, a 24-year-old There are some 8,000 Falash rookie, was cut by the Miami Dolphins this summer after Marty Goldberg, in yellow shirt, leads volunteers toting a mattress from the shore of the Courtney Camp- Mura in Ethiopia awaiting permis- signing with the club as an undrafted free agent out of bell Causeway to a debris collection site during the Reverse Tashlich cleanup on Sunday, Sept. 16. Another sion to immigrate to Israel, most of Florida Atlantic University. memory foam mattress was also recovered at the same site. whom have some family members The Browns signed Joseph after Zane Gonzalez in Israel. -
Knesset Spars Over Ousting Left-Wing NGO from Schools
and the bottom line and the message that I took away was: Knesset spars over ousting left-wing NGO from schools Don’t enlist in the IDF,” one of the students told the com- MK Gilon: Breaking the Silence is more Zionist than all the people here mittee. • By LIDAR GRAVE-LAZI speak in schools, as six MKs school principals invited the the bill. When asked if the students were removed from the meet- group to speak to teachers and Meretz MK Zehava Gal-On were explicitly told not to Breaking the Silence stands ing for disruptive behavior. students, defying the directive. also called Breaking the Silence enlist, the student said, “they at the head of the industry of Forer addressed the commit- On Tuesday, Bennett gave his “patriotic” and accused those didn’t say it straight out, but lies against the State of Israel, tee and said that the group support for new legislation that calling for its removal for pro- you could infer, I inferred this MK Amir Ohana (Likud) said slanders Israel to the world all would ban organizations that moting “a paranoid education from their speech, they said at a Knesset Education, Sports while receiving funding from testify against Israel in interna- system that doesn’t deal with this is not the army that you and Culture Committee meet- foreign governments. tional forums from schools. criticism.” want to enlist in.” ing on Wednesday. “The organization was caught The bill was submitted by “We want groups in schools Avichai Shorshan, from Ffae- Ohana made these remarks collecting classified materials MKs Shuli Moalem-Refaeli and who are pluralistic and not met Sheli (My Truth) said that in a very heated discussion, and information on IDF activ- Bezalel Smotrich from Ben- groups justifying the occupa- the UN and even Ffamas quote which he initiated together ity and we must not give them nett’s Bayit Yehudi party.