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Israeli elections: Blackmail, threats and a policy or two

The parties set out strategies in what they expect will be a close-run electoral contest

October 30, 2008 10:22

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

Israel's ruling party, Kadima, will try to run its election campaign on the promise to reform Israel's shaky electoral system. Kadima spin-doctors are planning to leverage the breakdown in coalition talks with Shas to portray party leader Tzipi Livni as a no-nonsense stateswoman who will not give in to blackmail.

Ms Livni's failure to secure a coalition, despite spending over a month negotiating with the potential partners, led her rivals within the party to criticise her anonymously as weak and indecisive. Her allies acted quickly to quash these allegations, praising the Foreign Minister for not giving in to the demands of Shas and accusing its leader, Trade Minister Eli Yishai, of blackmail.

"We have seen over the last weeks how problematic the current electoral system is," loyalist Kadima MK Shlomo Moula told the JC. "And we will be promising the public to push through a comprehensive programme of reform as soon as we are re-elected. Livni has proved now that she cannot be manipulated or threatened and people will understand what kind of a prime minister she will be."

Electoral reform will be a useful plank for Kadima to build its platform on, since Ms Livni's diplomatic plans, which include a significant territorial compromise with the Palestinians, are unpopular with many Israeli
voters.

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