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Nathan Jeffay

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Nathan Jeffay,

Nathan Jeffay

Analysis

Teflon Bibi turns crisis into uplift

December 16, 2010 15:27
Yishai got the blame for the poor state of the fire service
1 min read

In the run up to last year's general election which made him prime minister, some pundits referred to Binyamin Netanyahu as "Teflon Netanyahu". That was to say, political and PR disasters did not seem to scathe him.

Through his initial decisive response, Mr Netanyahu managed to present himself as part of the solution more than part of the problem - by giving the impression that the poor shape of the fire service has more to do with previous governments than with him. In the Maariv poll, a third of respondents blamed him and previous governments equally, 36.1 per cent blamed previous governments, and only 17.3 per cent blamed him.

And two factors since the fire have enabled him to keep this positive perception going.

The first is the unpopularity of Interior Minister Eli Yishai, who became the bogeyman of many Israelis back in the summer when he pushed forward a plan (not yet implemented) to deport 400 Israeli-born children of foreign workers and their parents whose visas have expired. Further lowering his popularity is the fact that he leads Shas, the strictly-Orthodox Sephardic party, which many Israelis dislike due to its sectarian agenda. When the State Comptroller's report, issued last week, said that responsibility for the state of the fire service rested "first and foremost" with Mr Yishai and his ministry, it was a godsend for Mr Netanyahu.