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Israel PM: How British Jews are my inspiration

Naftali Bennett writes for the JC on his first visit to the UK as Prime Minister of Israel

November 3, 2021 19:44
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GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - NOVEMBER 02: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson (R) shakes hands with Israel's Prime Minister Naftali Bennett prior to a meeting on the side-lines on day three of COP26 at SECC on November 2, 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom. 2021 sees the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference. The conference will run from 31 October for two weeks, finishing on 12 November. It was meant to take place in 2020 but was delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo by Alberto Pezzali - Pool / Getty Images)
3 min read

This week, I made my first official visit to the United Kingdom as Prime Minister of Israel to join my fellow world leaders at the COP26 UN Climate Summit in Glasgow. I came to lay out Israel’s commitments to tackle climate change, achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 and to share my vision of turning Israel into an international centre for climate innovation.

I came with resolve, because I have faith in what Israel and our new government can achieve.

I came into office at a time when we were heading towards our fifth election in two years. Amidst a global health pandemic, we were also plagued by an epidemic of political polarisation, paralysis and turmoil. We were a country that needed to come together. The antidote to this polarization was a coalition which, to be perfectly honest, I never believed in the past I would be part of, let alone lead. We needed unity above all else.

For the sake of Israel’s future, we formed a historic new government of eight parties from the right and left, religious and secular, Jews and Muslims, all united by the common purpose of service to the Israeli people. Every Sunday, at the party leaders’ meeting we hold before cabinet, we sit around one table and work together with respect, civility and decency. I won’t pretend that we don’t have differences and arguments, but we solve them together. We acknowledge that the right-wing doesn’t have a monopoly on patriotism, nor the left-wing on civil and human rights. Our new government brings with it a fresh start and a new spirit – of good-will, of decency and of hope.