Can Israel's electoral system be fixed? Try as he might, David Ben-Gurion could not reform Israel's electoral system, which gives extraordinary power to small parties. Today, a new generation of reformers takes on the challenge.[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] There was a reason that Israel's wild-haired, hardheaded hard·head·ed adj. 1. Stubborn; willful. 2. Realistic; pragmatic. hard head founding father and first prime minister named himself Ben-Gurion,
Hebrew for son of a young lion. Born David Grun Noun 1. David Grun - Israeli statesman (born in Poland) and active Zionist who organized resistance against the British after World War II; prime minister of Israel (1886-1973)Ben Gurion, David Ben Gurion , the charismatic Polish-born leader with a forceful personality and a streak of realpolitik realpolitik Politics based on practical objectives rather than on ideals. The word does not mean “real” in the English sense but rather connotes “things”—hence a politics of adaptation to things as they are. was accustomed to confronting difficult problems--and having his way with them. One of the greatest challenges he faced was transforming the fledgling country's political system. The electoral process aroused in BenGurion more anger and annoyance than any other institution he took part in creating. "In our electoral system electoral system Method and rules of counting votes to determine the outcome of elections. Winners may be determined by a plurality, a majority (more than 50% of the vote), an extraordinary majority (a percentage of the vote greater than 50%), or unanimity. ," he said in 1954, "the citizen has no right to choose his representatives. The candidates are selected not by the voter but by a central party committee. Our ballot system is a farce and worse, it is an abuse of democracy." Four years later, in a speech to the Knesset, Israel's parliament, he contended that the country employed a "bad democratic system" whose electoral procedures were "rotten and destructive." His words were prophetic. Israel has undergone immense change since its creation in 1948. Its population has grown ten-fold, its borders have shifted, its kibbutz movement The Kibbutz Movement (Hebrew: התנועה הקיבוצית, HaTenoa'a HaKibbutzit) is the largest movement of kibbutzim in Israel. and socialist orientation have faded and have been replaced by religious settlements and an ardor ar·dor n. 1. Fiery intensity of feeling. See Synonyms at passion. 2. Strong enthusiasm or devotion; zeal: "The dazzling conquest of Mexico gave a new impulse to the ardor of discovery" for high-tech, and it has made more enemies and fewer friends than it wished for. But almost 40 years after Ben-Gurion left politics, the Jewish state's electoral system--perhaps the only thing that Israel's first generation might have expected to change--remains largely untouched. Alongside the electoral systems of Italy and Weimar Germany--the latter of which helped smooth the way for the Nazis' ascendance--Israel's purely proportionate system will likely go down in history as one of the world's worst. Unlike the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. or European countries, which are divided into voting districts, all of Israel is treated as a single district with 120 representatives. In contrast to Germany or Turkey, where a political party can gain a seat in parliament if it garners five and 10 percent of the national vote, respectively, a party in Israel is guaranteed a place in the Knesset if it obtains a mere two percent. Since no single party ever wins a majority of Knesset seats, large parties depend on support from small ones to form coalitions, giving the small--sometimes fringe--parties disproportionate influence. Israel has seen over 30 governments, each comprised of 10 to 15 parties, in its 61 years of existence. "The root cause of Israel's institutional weakness," says Gidi Grinstein Gidi Grinstein is the President and founder of the Reut Institute[1], a non-partisan non-profit innovative policy group designed to provide real-time long-term strategic decision-support to the Government of Israel. , director of the Reut Institute The Reut Institute is an policy group designed to provide real-time long-term strategic decision-support to the Government of Israel. Established in January 2004 by Gidi Grinstein and a team of founders, Reut is a non-partisan non-profit policy team based in Tel Aviv that , an Israeli policy center, "is an electoral system that generates unstable and fragmented governments." It also creates incentives for acting and thinking in the short term, he says, when Israel needs a leadership that can think broadly and plan for the future. "It's a potentially tragic mismatch." The newest government, led by Likud veteran Benjamin Netanyahu and his sprawling, mainly right-wing coalition, is as good an example as any. Twelve parties were elected to the Knesset--Likud, Kadima, Yisrael Beiteinu Yisrael Beiteinu (Hebrew: ישראל ביתנו, lit. Israel, Our Home) is a right-wing political party in Israel. , Labor, Shas, United Torah Judaism Not to be confused with Union for Traditional Judaism. United Torah Judaism (Hebrew: יהדות התורה המאוחדת, , United Arab List The United Arab List (Hebrew: רשימה ערבית מאוחדת, Reshima Aravit Meukhedet , National Union, Hadash, New Movement-Meretz, The Jewish Home and Balad. Six joined the ruling coalition, which boasts 30 ministers, making it the largest and messiest in Israeli history. "They used to talk about a kitchen cabinet," says Harvard law professor and Israel advocate Alan Dershowitz Alan Morton Dershowitz (born September 1, 1938) is an American lawyer and criminal law professor known for his extensive published works, career as an attorney in several high-profile law cases, and commentary on the Arab-Israeli conflict. . "This is a mega-mansion cabinet. It's unwieldy and unworkable." The day after Netanyahu's government was sworn in, the distinguished American scholar of the Middle East, 92-year-old Bernard Lewis For the founder of the River Island retail chain, see Bernard Lewis (entrepreneur). Bernard Lewis (born May 31, 1916, London) is the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor Emeritus of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. , addressed the issue in the editorial pages of The Wall Street Journal. "It is becoming increasingly clear," he wrote, "that electoral reform Electoral reform projects seek to change the way that public desires are reflected in elections through electoral systems. Reform projects can include measures designed to reform political parties (typically changes to election laws); to redefine citizen eligibility to vote; to of some kind is imperative if Israeli democracy is to survive." Gideon Doron, a 64-year-old professor of political science at Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU, אוניברסיטת תל־אביב, את"א) is Israel's largest on-site university. , has been fighting for electoral reform for over three decades. Last year, frustrated by the lack of progress, he came up with a quintessentially Israeli ploy to both mock and rally support against the status quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy. . Taking advantage of Israel's liberal electoral qualifications, he founded his own political party, "The Israelis," a one-man boondoggle boon·dog·gle Informal n. 1. An unnecessary or wasteful project or activity. 2. a. A braided leather cord worn as a decoration especially by Boy Scouts. b. focused on a single issue: electoral reform. Doron's party was one of 33 on the ballot in February (an unprecedented 43 parties registered, but 10 chose not to run), and it received fewer than 1,000 votes--not enough to capture a seat in the Knesset. But Doron didn't run to win; he sought "to get reform to the top of the public agenda." "The registration fee was $20,000," he says, "but the TV and publicity--that was free." The campaign to reform Israel's electoral system is as old as the country--but the system itself is older. "The electoral system that we have is a reflection of the 19th century idea of how to represent as many Jews as possible," says Doron. "The Zionist Congress wanted to create the image that it represented Jews from all over Europe, that it spoke for all Jews." It had no other choice, he explains, if it wanted to enlist support--and collect money--from international Jewry. As a result, the Jewish Agency, the Jews' de facto [Latin, In fact.] In fact, in deed, actually. This phrase is used to characterize an officer, a government, a past action, or a state of affairs that must be accepted for all practical purposes, but is illegal or illegitimate. government in Palestine before 1948, adopted a system that was as inclusive as possible--one based on proportional representation proportional representation: see representation. proportional representation Electoral system in which the share of seats held by a political party in the legislature closely matches the share of popular votes it received. , national party lists and a low threshold for parliamentary representation. "Under pre-1948 circumstances this was a reasonable system," the Jerusalem Post columnist and Shalem Center The Shalem Center is an academic research institute in Jerusalem established in 1994 with the goal of developing the ideas needed to guide and sustain the Jewish state and the Jewish people in the coming decades. lecturer Amotz Asa-El Amotz Asa-El was the Jerusalem Post's executive editor in 2002 - 2005, and before that served as its business editor, news editor, and editor of its overseas edition, The International Jerusalem Post. In these positions, Asa-El (www.MiddleIsrael. wrote recently in the publication Azure azure /az·ure/ (azh´er) one of three metachromatic basic dyes (A, B, and C). az·ure n. Any of various dyes used in biological stains, especially for blood and nuclear staining. , "since the Yishuv [the community of Jews who lived in Palestine before 1948] was minuscule, its elected representatives were not sovereign, and the representation of myriad ideologies and communities, as allowed by the proportional system, seemed both just and practical." Not long after Israel declared independence, its provisional government A provisional government is an emergency or interim government set up when a political void has been created by the collapse of a previous administration or regime. A provisional government holds power until elections can be held or a permanent government can otherwise be began to plan for a convention to create a constitution, which would, among other things, establish rules for elections. It appointed a three-member committee to determine a procedure for electing delegates to the convention. One member was Ben-Gurion, head of the Jewish Agency and leader of the dominant, leftwing party, Mapai. Ben-Gurion admired the British system, which he called "the most efficient political system in the world." In particular, he was impressed that the British had managed to maintain their "political freedom even during the storm of war." More broadly, he felt that it struck a healthy balance between representation and governability. "Two-party rule," he said, was "absolutely necessary." His fellow committee members were Yitzhak Gruenbaum Yitzhak Gruenbaum (Hebrew and Yiddish: יצחק גרינבוים, born 1879 died 1970) was a noted leader of the Zionist movement among Polish Jewry between the two world wars and of the Yishuv in Mandatory Palestine, and , a fiery Polishborn journalist and politician affiliated with the liberal, free-market-oriented General Zionist Party; and Pinchas Rosen, a German immigrant who founded the New Aliyah aliyah (Hebrew; “ascending”) In Judaism, the honour, accorded to a worshiper, of being called up to read an assigned passage from the Torah at Sabbath morning services; or Jewish immigration to Israel. Party in 1942 and later joined the centrist Progressive Party. As members of small parties, the natural beneficiaries of the pre-state system, Gruenbaum and Rosen were less interested in the British system. In fact, they were disinclined dis·in·clined adj. Unwilling or reluctant: They were usually disinclined to socialize. disinclined Adjective unwilling or reluctant to push for change at all. The 1948 War was a boon to the small party representatives. With battles raging, a consensus emerged that the only viable choice was to preserve the existing system. "The opponents of district elections [including Rosen and Gruenbaum] clearly had their hidden agenda," says Asa-El, but "there really was a diplomatic need to hold an election with no delay." David Bar-Rav-Hai, chairman of the election committee at the time, said that creating a new system would have required "complicated preparations" and thus would have been "impossible to carry out within a short period of time." Elections for the constitutional convention were held in January 1949. But in February, Ben-Gurion decided to hold off on a constitution--"he had to prioritize his objectives," says Doron--and the convention declared itself Israel's first Knesset. Mapai won 46 out of 120 seats, and the United Religious Front--a group of religious parties that would become his main coalition partner--16. The Religious Front opposed the idea of a constitution and thereby the establishment of a permanent electoral system. "They said they had a constitution already: the Bible," says Doron. And like the other small parties, they weren't keen on changing the electoral system at their own expense. While Ben-Gurion was prepared to temporarily forego a constitution for the sake of national unity, he was determined to change the electoral process at any price. "I do not think that the appearance of 21 competing [party] lists in the Knesset elections in this little country of six or seven hundred thousand inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. is the expression of democracy or social maturity," he told the Knesset in 1949. "As a Jew, I am ashamed of this sick phenomenon." As Ben-Gurion saw it, the small parties not only inhibited his ability to govern; without their support--which would have required their willfully willfully adv. referring to doing something intentionally, purposefully and stubbornly. Examples: "He drove the car willfully into the crowd on the sidewalk." "She willfully left the dangerous substances on the property." (See: willful) relinquishing power--reforms would be virtually impossible to pass. In effect, they had him in a stranglehold. Try as he might, Ben-Gurion couldn't break free from their grip. A 1954 effort to raise the minimum threshold--thereby limiting the number of parties in government--and switch to a British-style system drew little support, and the pre-state electoral system was enshrined in what are called Israel's Basic Laws. In 1964, following his second dramatic resignation, Ben-Gurion considered forming a broad-based party focused solely on electoral reform, but backed out when his Mapai colleague Levi Eshkol, the reigning prime minister, assured several small parties that he would block any attempts at reform. A year later, Ben-Gurion broke away from Mapai to form Rafi--one of its central aims was electoral reform--but his efforts were thwarted once again. As long as Mapai, later Labor, was the dominant party, winning around 40 percent of the vote, Israel's electoral system worked reasonably well. "Mapai was ruling quite comfortably with the religious parties and that was stable," says Doron. But disgust at government corruption on the heels of the 1967 war changed Israel's political landscape, ushering in Noun 1. ushering in - the introduction of something new; "it signalled the ushering in of a new era" first appearance, introduction, debut, entry, launching, unveiling - the act of beginning something new; "they looked forward to the debut of their new product line" a strong and dynamic opposition. When the right-wing Likud party, led by former Irgun leader Menachem Begin Noun 1. Menachem Begin - Israeli statesman (born in Russia) who (as prime minister of Israel) negotiated a peace treaty with Anwar Sadat (then the president of Egypt) (1913-1992) Begin , burst onto the scene in 1977, stability was undermined. Under Israel's Basic Laws, the party that won the most Knesset seats was not guaranteed the prime minister position. The result was that the individual deemed by the smaller parties as most capable of forming a coalition won. Instead of devolving into a two-party system A two-party system is a form of party system where two major political parties dominate the voting in nearly all elections. As a result, all, or nearly all, elected offices end up being held by candidates endorsed by the two major parties. , as Ben-Gurion had once hoped, the smaller parties became kingmakers in Israeli politics. Ten electoral reform bills were introduced between 1958 and 1988 and, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Azure's Asa-El, were shot down by religious parties. The 1984 attempt came closest: Likud and Labor together gained about two thirds of the Knesset's 120 seats; because neither could form a coalition, they agreed to share power in a national unity government. Many members of both parties agreed to reform the electoral system in order to prevent the sort of near-paralysis that the election had caused. But, as Asa-El writes, the religious parties "threatened to sever all ties with the Likud once and for all should the party support electoral reform," and the Likud members quickly backed down. In 1985, responding to growing public outrage, Uriel Reichman, then the dean of Tel Aviv Tel Aviv (tĕl əvēv`), city (1994 pop. 355,200), W central Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea. Oficially named Tel Aviv–Jaffa, it is Israel's commercial, financial, communications, and cultural center and the core of its largest University's law school, started a campaign to create an Israeli constitution, warning that Israel was "on a track to suicide." One of his suggestions, that Israelis should vote for prime ministers directly, was adopted in 1992 (along with a motion to raise the minimum threshold from 1.5 to 2 percent), and implemented in 1996. Intended to give the prime minister more power in the coalition-building process, the move backfired. The reform prompted the electorate to split its vote between a prime minister and a party that often had a narrow agenda. The big parties began to disintegrate. In 1996, the largest, Likud, won a mere 34 seats--the fewest in Israeli history to that point--and in 1999, Labor won the election with only 26. Together, Likud and Labor controlled 45 out of 120 seats. "What we had in '96 and '99 was sectarian politics," says Doron, who opposed the reforms. Starting in 1996, he says, citizens voted increasingly along cultural and religious lines, making it "very difficult to form a coalition and to rule." Widely acknowledged to have been a failure, the reforms were abolished. Proponents of change may have suffered a major setback, but their cause continued to gain steam. In 2003, Isaac Parviz Nazarian, an Iranian-born businessman based in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , founded the Citizens Empowerment Center in Israel (CECI CECI Centre Canadien d'Étude et de Coopération Internationale (French) CECI Centre Canadien d'Etudes et de Cooperation Internationale CECI Center for Educational Computing Initiatives CECI Consulting Engineers Council of Illinois ) to promote electoral reform. It was one of several recent American initiatives "to save the Israelis from themselves," says Doron, and it paved the way for the creation of the Commission for the Examination of the Structure of Government (the President's Commission) in 2005. Led by Menachem Magidor, president of Hebrew University Hebrew University of Jerusalem, at Mt. Scopus, Givat Ram, Ein Karem, and Rehovot, Israel; coeducational. First proposed in 1882, formally opened 1925. It is the world's largest Jewish university and is noted for its work on the Dead Sea Scrolls. , the commission recommended that half of the Knesset's members be elected regionally, that the cabinet's size be limited to 18 and that the minimum threshold be raised to 2.5 percent. In 2008, members of Labor and Likud co-sponsored an ambitious bill written by the Kadima Party's Menachem Ben Sasson based on the commission's recommendations. It was backed by three of the Knesset's four largest parties--only Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu did not endorse the bill. But Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had granted veto power over changes to the Basic Law to the parties in his coalition. Shas promised to employ its veto, and the bill was shelved. By the time of the election this February, support for electoral reform had reached a fever pitch. "Today," says Yuval Lipkin, a Kadima member and the head of CECI, "everybody understands that the political structure is not good." Indeed, a recent CECI poll found that more than 60 percent of Israelis support the adoption of reform in line with the Commission's plan. "If we do regional elections we'll have two or three parties [in the coalition]," adds Lipkin. "This is the only way we can have stability." Kadima reintroduced its electoral reform bill on the first day of the new Knesset, late in February. But at the time, Netanyahu was scrambling to form a coalition. Rather than risk alienating Shas or Yisrael Beiteinu, whose support he would need, Likud chose to nix the bill. Gideon Sa'ar, a leading Likud figure and one of the bill's sponsors, laid the blame on the usual suspects. Shas, says Lipkin, "understands that they'll have a problem with the new system." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Even if change can be pushed through, it's unclear what it could achieve. Asher Arian, a fellow at the Israeli Democracy Institute, one of the earliest think tanks to agitate for electoral reform, points out that electoral reform in other countries has been unsuccessful. Italy, he says, which historically used a near-proportional electoral system and has been plagued by unstable governments, has enacted several major reforms. "They haven't managed to solve their problems," he says. "What this suggests is that the problem is not in the mechanism. The problem is in the issues facing the political system and/or the behavior of the individuals in the system." Arian believes that change needs to occur incrementally. "Introducing districts will give people a stronger sense of connection to the system," he says, and ensure that Knesset members are responsive to their constituents. "A reform that says the party that gets the largest vote will be the one who will form the government will help, and perhaps raising the minimum requirement to three or four percent will help, too." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Still, Arian worries that the hype around electoral reform is motivated by a belief that it will cause the country's major problems to disappear. "I think it's looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. a magical potion po·tion n. A liquid medicinal dose or drink. potion a large dose of liquid medicine. ," he says. Changing the system "will not make the Palestinians Zionists." Gideon Doron, on the other hand, attributes "most of the problems in Israel" to the country's political system. But he questions whether anything can be done to change it. "We are working very hard for reform, but I don't think there will be a chance until there is a major crisis," he says. "Like Lenin said, 'it will get worse before it gets better.'" Until then, he says, the issue will stand alongside Iran and the global economic crisis as one of the "existential threats" to Israel. Doron's analysis is shared by many American Jews who favor a two-state solution. Daniel Gordis, the vice president of the Shalem Center in Israel, suggests that the focus on electoral reform among American Jews is in some ways a reflection of their naively optimistic outlook. "Americans really believe that all conflicts have a solution," he says. "If you say that the Palestinians simply don't want to make peace, then there is no solution. So, they reason, the problem must be the political system. I think there's an attempt here to give them some vestige vestige /ves·tige/ (ves´tij) the remnant of a structure that functioned in a previous stage of species or individual development.vestig´ial ves·tige n. of hope to hold on to without making the problem seem completely insolvable." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Gordis also believes that American Jews want Israel to model its political system on that of the United States. "They are very proud of their democracy," he says, "and Americans who are looking to be proud of Israel think, if only Israel functioned more like America." David Ben-Gurion, for his part, looked to Britain, not the United States, and he came up empty-handed. Whether or not the American or any other model proves easier to emulate, the challenge remains formidable. Those who believe that reform is possible may take comfort in Ben-Gurion's famous words: "In Israel," he said, "in order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles." |
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