Tag Archive: government


New Panels Poll, conducted on Aug 27 2015 for Knesset Channel TV, on a range of domestic issues.

The last public opinion poll on seat distribution was back in March.

Would you like to see Ehud Barak return to politics?

Yes 11%
No 74%

Are you pleased with the conduct of Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon?

Yes 27%
No 53%

Is Minister Erdan’s decision to appoint a person from outside the police as Commissioner correct?

Correct 54%
Wrong 22%

Do you think the selection of Gal Hirsch as Commissioner is a good choice?

Good 36%
Not good 21%

What grade do you give Education Minister Naftali Bennett?

Good 48%
Average 27%
Bad 11%

Are you more pleased with Education Minister Bennett or former Education Minister Piron?

Bennett 38%
Piron 22%
Equal 11%

What is the most important issue for the education system in Israel?

Educational values 50%
Reducing class size 28%
Increasing Science & Technology classes 12%
Strengthening Mathematics 7%.

Would you define Education Minister Naftali Bennett as the Education Minister of all Israeli children?

All Israeli children 45%
Mostly for the Jewish community 15%
Mostly for the religious community 14%
Mostly for the right 8%

Who would you vote for in the Labor Party primaries?:

Option A:

(All voters)

Herzog 24%
Yachimovitz 39%
Barak 14%

(Labor Voters)

Herzog 42%
Yachimovitz 40%
Barak 12%

Option B:

(All voters)

Herzog 18%
Yachimovitz 37%
Ashkenazi 22%

(Labor Voters)

Herzog 38%
Yachimovitz 37%
Ashkenazi 20%

*Question was for “Labor voters”, not “Labor party members”.

Latest Poll from Israel

New Wave Poll conducted a poll for Yisrael Hayom that was published this weekend:

It has been months since the election and we are still waiting for the first public post-election poll on seats. There have been many other types of public polls and since I haven’t posted in a while, here is the latest poll from Israel:

Who do you think is most suitable at this time to serve as Israeli Prime Minister?

39% Netanyahu

14% Herzog

13% Lapid

6% Kahlon

5% Liberman

23% Don’t Know

*Other party leaders such as Ayman Odah, Naftali Bennett and Zahava Gal-On were not polled.

Should we or should we not keep fighting the Iran deal?

76% Yes

15% No

8% Don’t Know

Do you think US President Obama is concerned or not concerned about Israeli interests?

73% Not concerned

20% Concerned

8% Don’t know

Committee Appointments and Chairs

Will update as week goes on
12 Knesset Committee Chairs

Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee – Tzachi Hanegbi (Likud)

Appropriations Committee – Moshe Gafni (UTJ)

Law, Justice and Constitution Committee – Nissan Slomiansky (Bayit Yehudi)

Labor, Welfare and Health Committee – Elie Elalouf (Kulanu)

Education, Culture, and Sports Committee – TBD (Shas MK)

Science and Technology Committee – TBD (UTJ MK)

House Committee –

Internal Affairs and Environment Committee –

Committee for Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs –

Committee on the Status of Women and Gender Equality –

Economy Committee – Eitan Cabel (Zionist Union)

State Control Committee – Karin Elharrar (Yesh Atid)

4 Other Knesset Committee Chairs:

Rights of the Child or Public Petitions Committee Committee – Kulanu MK will serve in one

Drug and Alcohol Abuse,   Committee on Foreign Workers – Most likely will go to Opposition

 Committee Appointments

Committee Likud Zionist Union Joint List Yesh Atid Kulanu
House Committee 6 3 2 1 1
Appropriations Committee 4 3 2 1 2
Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee 5 5 0 2 1
Law, Justice and Constitution Committee 3 2 1 2 1
Economy Committee 3 3 2 1 1
Internal Affairs and Environment Committee 3 2 2 1 1
Education, Culture, and Sports Committee 3 2 2 1 1
State Control Committee 3 2 1 1 1
Labor, Welfare and Health Committee 3 2 1 1 1
Science and Technology Committee 3 2 1 1 1
Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs 1 2 0 1 1
Status of Women and Gender Equality 1 2 2 1 1
 Total 38 30 16 14 13
Committee Bayit Yehudi Shas Beitenu UTJ Meretz
House Committee 1 1 1 1 0
Appropriations Committee 1 1 1 1 1
Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee 2 0 1 1 0
Law, Justice and Constitution Committee 1 1 0 1 1
Economy Committee 0 1 0 1 1
Internal Affairs and Environment Committee 1 1 0 1 1
Education, Culture, and Sports Committee 1 1 1 1 0
State Control Committee 1 1 1 0 0
Labor, Welfare and Health Committee 0 1 0 1 1
Science and Technology Committee 0 0 1 0 0
Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs 1 1 2 0 0
Status of Women and Gender Equality 1 0 1 0 1
Total 10 9 9 8 6

Committee Appointments approved 30-2 in the Temporary Knesset Committee.

Nine of the ten factions agreed to the appointments.

Yisrael Beitenu voted against.

Yisrael Beitenu asked for a revision, claiming they are not interested in two spots on Immigration Committee.

The revision was defeated.

Update #1:

11 Security Cabinet Ministers

3 Returning Ministers

Netanyahu (Likud)
Yaalon (Likud)
Bennett (Bayit Yehudi)

8 New Ministers

Kahlon (Kulanu)
Deri (Shas)
Shaked (Bayit Yehudi)
Y. Katz (Likud)
Shalom (Likud)
Elkin (Likud)
Levin (Likud)
Begin (Likud)

Update #2 – Deputy Ministers

Deputy Finance Minister Yitzack Cohen (Shas)
Deputy Defense Minister Eli Ben-Dahan (Bayit Yehudi)
Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovelly (Likud)
Deputy Health Minister Yaakov Litzman (UTJ)
Deputy Education Minister Meir Parush (UTJ)
Deputy Welfare Minister Mashulam Nahari (Shas)
Deputy Regional Cooperation Minister Ayoub Kara (Likud)

Phase Three was finally completed on May 14th 2015, almost two months after the election, following the 61-59 vote in the Knesset plenum.

Israel’s 34th Government (Netanyahu’s 4th)

20 Ministers + PM

Prime Minister + Foreign Minister + Health Minister + Communications Minister + Regional Cooperation Minister + Authority of Jerusalem Affairs Minister – Benjamin Netanyahu (Likud)

Finance Minister – Moshe Kahlon (Kulanu)

Education Minister + Diaspora Affairs Minister – Naftali Bennett (Bayit Yehudi)

Economy Minister + Negev & Galil Minister – Aryeh Deri (Shas)

Defense Minister – Moshe Yaalon (Likud)

Interior Minister + Deputy Prime Minister – Silvan Shalom (Likud)

Justice Minister – Ayelet Shaked (Bayit Yehudi)

Transportation Minister + Intelligence Affairs Minister + Authority of Atomic Energy – Yisrael Katz (Likud)

Energy and Water + Partial authority of Strategic Affairs – Yuval Steinitz (Likud)

Housing Minister – Yoav Galant (Kulanu)

Religious Services Minister – David Azoulay (Shas)

Agriculture Minister – Uri Ariel (Bayit Yehudi)

Internal Security Minister + Tourism Minister + Minister Coordinating with Knesset – Yariv Levin (Likud)

Immigration & Absorption Minister + Partial authority of Strategic Affairs – Zeev Elkin (Likud)

Science, Technology & Space Minister – Danny Danon (Likud)

Welfare Minister – Chaim Katz (Likud)

Culture & Sport Minister – Miri Regev (Likud)

Senior Citizens Minister + Gender Equality Minister + Authority of Youth Department and Minority Affairs – Gila Gamliel (Likud)

Minister in Communications Ministry (under Communications Minister Netanyahu) – Ofir Akuins (Likud)

Minister without portfolio – Benny Begin (Likud)

Environment Minister – Avi Gabai (Kulanu)

Other Tidbits

Defense & Foreign Affairs Knesset Committee Chairman + Coalition Chairman Tzachi Hanegbi will swap places with Ofir Akunis as a Minister in the Communications Ministry in a year.

Deputy Health Minister Litzman (UTJ), Deputy Foreign Minister Hotovelly (Likud) and Deputy Regional Cooperation Minister Kara (Likud) will serve under Health, Foreign & Regional Cooperation Minister Netanyahu, without another Minister on top of them. The other Deputy Ministers, such as Deputy Defense Minister Ben-Dahan (Bayit Yehudi), will have Ministers above them.

Likud’s  #2 Gilad Erdan refused a spot in Netanyahu’s cabinet because his requests for Foreign or Interior+Internal Security was denied.

Stay tuned for the Knesset Jeremy analysis later this weekend.

Netanyahu’s House of Cards

Netanyahu’s House of Cards

Spoiler Alert: Plot points from the three seasons of the UK version of House of Cards disclosed in this article.

In the British version of the now popular American television series House of Cards, Prime Minister Francis Urquhart serves as the leader of the United Kingdom for 11 years and 210 days, passing Margaret Thatcher by a single day to become the UK’s longest-serving Prime Minister.

65-year-old Benjamin Netanyahu has been Prime Minister for a collective 9 plus years. According to a study by the Israel Democracy Institute, Prime Minister Netanyahu would pass David Ben-Gurion to become Israel’s longest-serving leader on September 23, 2018. Israel will most likely hold an early election before the next scheduled election on November 5, 2019. Expect Netanyahu to focus on the earlier date.

1,233 days to go.

Prime Minister Netanyahu signed agreements with four coalition partners to reach a narrow coalition of 61 MKs to the opposition’s 59. Although navigating a narrow coalition has been done before, it is extremely difficult.

What happens when an MK is in the hospital with his wife who is going into labor? What if an MK is in the hospital for a more tragic reason such as a serious injury? What happens when an MK decides that his best friend’s daughter’s wedding is more important than waiting all night in the Knesset to vote against his ideology because of a previous coalition deal agreement?

There is no doubt that this will be a difficult coalition to manage, and it still is not clear who will be named as the coalition chairman (chief whip) who will have to answer the above questions and keep coalition MKs from flying overseas. The next coalition chairman will play an important role in the success of the next coalition. Similar to the House of Cards series, with such a narrow coalition if the person who is in charge of keeping the backbenchers in line has their own agenda it could result in an eventual leadership change.

Even with a loyal coalition chairman, the anticipated legislative deadlock between parties with polarized views on certain issues will make maintaining the coalition extremely difficult for the new appointee.  However, just like the fictional Prime Minister Francis Urquhart, Netanyahu’s undoing might come from within.

The coalition parties do not have a good reason to vote against the government for at least the next two years. They all were given the authority, responsibility, and budgets they requested.

The ultra-orthodox parties of Shas and UTJ are back from the exile of the opposition. They suffered great losses in the last Knesset and would not do anything to jeopardize the collapse of the fourth Netanyahu government, nor do they harbor the ambition to one day replace him. They both signed coalition deals that they know are once-in-a-lifetime. Opposition Leader Herzog will not offer them nearly as much as Netanyahu did.

Bayit Yehudi will be motivated to follow coalition discipline after the package they received that included the Justice and Education portfolios. Even in a scenario of new elections and additional seats, Bayit Yehudi would not be expected to receive a better deal.

Kahlon’s new centrist Kulanu Party cannot afford to topple a government before his planned reforms on housing and the banks are completed. Although Kahlon might pick a fight or two he will be bluffing, since he risks losing his constituency to Lapid in the next elections if he doesn’t deliver on his reforms, his reason for agreeing to the highly unpopular steep payday for the ultra-orthodox community.

The situation in Likud is different. While the coalition parties negotiated attractive deals they are unlikely to give up, Netanyahu will have difficulty satisfying the demands of Likud’s MKs. Interior Minister Gilad Erdan is frustrated that, as the number 2 of the party that received 30 seats, he likely will not receive a top portfolio or a promotion. Energy and Water Minister Silvan Shalom is done playing Mr. Nice Guy with Netanyahu and expects a top post. Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon cannot be happy that, although Netanyahu backtracked, the Prime Minister did offer Yaalon’s position to Bayit Yehudi’s Naftali Bennett before the election. Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz was reportedly furious when Netanyahu tried to give his portfolio to Shas’s Aryeh Deri a few weeks ago. Netanyahu’s top cabinet loyalist, Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz, wants a promotion, and it will be difficult to find one for him. These five Likud ministers all view themselves as candidates to replace Netanyahu one day, and the Prime Minister is aware of that. If Netanyahu does not find a way to keep them happy in their next cabinet posts, it could lead to his eventual undoing.

Netanyahu plans to re-appoint Benny Begin and Tzachi Hanegbi to the cabinet, two of his previous ministers who were members of his first cabinet back in the 1990s and veteran MKs of the famous 1988 class in which the Prime Minister himself was first elected. The Prime Minister also plans to appoint five new Likud ministers from ten potential candidates. There will be disappointed Likud MKs, and some, such as Ayoub Kara, might threaten to vote against the establishment of the government. Finding appropriate jobs for the five disappointed minister candidates will be essential for Netanyahu’s survival. Many of the minister candidates might have little experience and lack the qualifications that would make them suitable for a ministry, but they insist that they are loyal and should be rewarded.

In House of Cards Francis Urquhart is always victorious against his external foes whether it be the opposition Labor Party or going head-to-head with the King. However, in the final season Urquhart chooses to bully weak cabinet members, fire his Parliamentary Private Secretary and later disrespect his Foreign Secretary Tom Makepeace by asking him to take a demotion to Education, which leads to Makepeace’s resignation. It is not external elements that becomes Urquhart’s undoing; rather, it is the cabinet reshuffle in which he promotes loyalist backbenchers with little experience who get into trouble. The disgraced Foreign Secretary who chooses to run against the sitting Prime Minister after finding skeletons in the Prime Minister’s closet eventually leads to his downfall. The crafty Francis Urquhart who had never thought Makepeace was capable of replacing him was left blind-sided.

Netanyahu seems focused on external potential Prime Minister candidates such as Isaac Herzog, Naftali Bennett, Moshe Kahlon, Yair Lapid and Avigdor Liberman at the expense of ignoring the threats from within his own party. The end of Netanyahu’s tenure as Prime Minister might begin by not promoting his current Likud ministers and leaving other Likud MKs without a spot around the cabinet table.

Although Netanyahu will not end his political career this week, the seeds will be planted with the formation of his government this week. Netanyahu is a skilled politician and will most likely find a way to form and maintain the next government for the short term. He knows how to ensure his government can survive even with one or two renegade MKs. The Israeli electorate will not vote for a Likud Party that cannibalized itself so quickly after an election and Netanyahu’s potential successors are aware of that. The question is what happens when one of those potential successors from within, or perhaps from the outside such as Gideon Saar, find a way to force an internal Likud leadership election and find support with a large number of disgruntled Likud MKs. This week Netanyahu will disappoint some of his MKs, both those looking for a ministerial promotion and those looking for a seat in the cabinet. Those who are considering running for Likud leadership will look to befriend every disgruntled Likud MK they can. Don’t expect them to wait until September 23, 2018.

When Prime Minister Netanyahu realizes that it is the Likud that will be his undoing, he might identify with Prime Minister Francis Urquhart’s quote after receiving the headcount ahead of the next leadership race.

“175 of my honorable colleagues firmly intend to vote for me, 123 are almost certainly against me. How dare they! They owe me everything. Half of them wouldn’t even have jobs let alone seats in Parliament. As if I hadn’t won three elections in a row and kept their noses in the gravy and these stuffed suits, these lumps of lobby fodder dare to raise themselves against me?”

Prime Ministers do not live forever, even if Netanyahu might think that he can.

However, a warning is in order for Netanyahu’s potential Likud challengers: In the novel version of House of Cards, despite ousting Urquhart, Makepeace fails in his attempt for Prime Minister.