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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Barak's out, so where next for Labour Party?

March 3, 2011 12:33
1 min read

Three historical ruling parties in the Middle East have taken severe beatings over the last two months: Egypt's National Democratic Party, Tunisia's Constitutional Democratic Party and Israel's Labour Party.

The analogy may not be exactly apt: the two Arab parties were pushed out of power this year by a combination of public protests and military pressure, while the Labour Party lost power 34 years ago in democratic elections and have managed to return to office only sporadically ever since.

But the party of Ben-Gurion, Eshkol, Meir, Rabin and Peres - before he defected to Kadima - has remained the historical ruling party of a young state, which itself would be unimaginable without old Mapai (the Hebrew acronym of Labour's previous name - Workers Party of Eretz Yisrael).

Was the sudden departure of party leader Ehud Barak, along with a third of the party's MKs, two months ago, just another milestone in Labour's inexorable decline? The final falling of the axe? Or maybe the darkness before a new dawn?