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Israel now has a ‘one state’ majority

Benjamin Netanyahu's was a win for a feeling, and perhaps for an idea, writes Dominic Green

March 31, 2021 14:54
Bibi F200316YS226
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds a press conference at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem on March 16, 2020. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90
3 min read

There was no clear outcome of the fourth Israeli elections in two years. But three clear conclusions can be drawn. The first is that it’s a strange kind of “apartheid” state in which the leader of an Islamist party gets to decide who the next prime minister will be. The second is that the Knesset contains a clear majority for a one-state solution. The third is that the Americans won’t like it.

Benjamin Netanyahu is an accomplished teller of half-truths, and he was half-right in calling the result a “huge win for the right”. But it was not the kind of win that could translate into a Knesset majority. It was a win for a feeling, and perhaps for an idea.

That feeling is distrust of a Palestinian state in Judea and Samaria, distrust of the left-wing parties that brought about the Oslo Accords, and distrust of the left and centre parties’ alternative proposal, which is the notion of “separation” from the Palestinians.

Separation is impossible in the West Bank. Since 1967, every Israeli government has considered the welding of the Palestinian economy to the Israeli one to be in the national interest. Israeli governments of the left and right have deliberately mixed the Jewish and Arab populations, whether for strategic necessity, biblical precedent, Zionist enthusiasm or the need to build bedroom communities for commuters.

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