With three months to go until Israelis go to the polls on April 9, barely a day goes by without a new party being formed, or an existing one splitting in two.
On Tuesday, both of those things happened: former IDF Brigadier-General Gal Hirsh launched his “Magen Yisrael” party, while veteran Arab-Israeli legislator Ahmad Tibi announced his Arab Renewal party was splitting from the Joint List, of which it had been part in the last Knesset.
This proliferation of lists has led to the bizarre situation where at least six vaguely centrist parties — Labour, Yesh Atid, Kulanu, Gesher, Hatnuah and Israel Resilience — all nearly indistinguishable when it comes to their platforms, are competing for the same voters.
Israel Resilience (“Hosen Yisrael” in Hebrew), the party founded only two weeks ago by former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, is now in second place after Likud in some polls — even though Mr Gantz has not made a single political statement.