Become a Member

By

Ray Filar

Opinion

Shift to the centre could help lefty voices in the diaspora

February 28, 2013 15:16
3 min read

It's tough out there for a left-wing Zionist. You can scarcely enter a student union without tripping over lefty Jews, but those of us who identify at all with Israel have to keep very quiet about it. I've lost count of the number of times I've heard Zionism wildly equated with racism, apartheid, Nazism and the perpetuation of all world evils. Conflating "Zionism" with the worst in current Israeli policy, some leftists forget that other approaches to Jewish self-determination ever existed. Or more likely, they never even knew they did. Why bother to research when there's a nice big bandwagon to jump on?

Now, however, this is set in the context of an Israeli political landscape that is perhaps finally shifting. The shock story from January's elections was the rise of the centre-left. Israelis inspired by the social justice movement turned out in droves for Yair Lapid's secular, middle-ground policies and silvery good looks, making his Yesh Atid party the second largest in the Knesset. At the same time, Tzipi Livni's liberal party Hatnuah stole six seats from her former party Kadima, whose choice of a more conservative leader became its downfall. The centre-left bloc now holds 59 seats, the religious-right has 61.

If Lapid joins Netanyahu's coalition and carries on winning over the masses, he could move the goalposts of what is considered "reasonable" back to the political centre. This means renewing focus on the peace process, halting settlement expansion and ending discrimination toward non-Jewish Israeli minorities - policies that both the centre and left can get behind. Such a shift back to the centre would allow Israelis to see Bibi as the hardliner so much of the international community already takes him for.

Since David Cameron's coalition government came to power, the UK has been experiencing this process, but in reverse. The territory of accepted opinion has shifted from centre to right. The abortion debate is a case in point. After the Jeremy Hunt backed halving the time limit to 12 weeks, home secretary Theresa May's call for a cap at 20 weeks - down from 24 - looked less radical. With Hunt's idea drawing the ire of pro-choicers everywhere, May got off scot free for appearing to advocate the common sense option.