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Israeli elections 2015

Falcon29

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Netanyahu says US money driving high Arab voter turnout - Israel News, Ynetnews

Netanyahu's Likud party sent out message warning Israelis of 'threat' of a high voter turnout among Israel's Arab population in bid to shore up hardliner right wing votes; Arabs and data contradict claim.

Ynet

Published: 03.17.15, 17:42 / Israel News
"Voter turnout in the Arab sector is three times higher! The threat is real: Abu Mazen's calls and American money are getting the Arab vote out. Go and vote," a message sent by Prime Minister Netanyahu's Likud party informed Israelis during Election Day.


With his political future in question, Netanyahu made a list-ditch appeal to hard-liners as the country went to the polls in a tight election for the Knesset, saying that high Arab voter turnout was endangering his right wing party's dominance.

Opinion polls had shown a close race heading into the vote, with Netanyahu's opponents, led by Isaac Herzog of the centrist Zionist Union, in a slight lead. The last available poll was published Friday, when a significant number of voters were still undecided, meaning the race was still too close to call.


But amid signs that his six-year reign could be in jeopardy, Netanyahu has veered sharply to the right in the closing days of the campaign. On Tuesday, he reiterated a pledge to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state - backtracking from six years of his own policy and putting him at odds with the United States and other Western allies.


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"It's us or them" Likud solgan reads (Photo: Reuters)


At midday, Netanyahu claimed high Arab voter turnout was putting his right wing Likud Party's rule "in danger," according to a posting on his Facebook page. "Arab voters are going to the polls in droves. Left wing organizations are bringing them in buses," he said.



He also called on supporters to vote for him to "narrow the gap" between Likud and the Zionist Union. "With your help, and with the help of God, we will build a nationalist government that will protect the state of Israel," he said.


However, according to data attained by Ynet the voter turnout among Israeli Arabs was similar to the average of previous elections, with some communities reporting a lower than average turnout.



As of 4 pm the overall voter turnout stood at 45.4 percent, slightly lower than the previous election's turnout for the same hour, which stood at 46.6 percent.



MK Ahmad Tibi, from the Joint Arab Party, slammed Netanyahu for the statement, saying "Netanyahu's claims of a dramatic increase in voting rates in Arab communities is just false – it's an election spin. Some communities had a higher turnout and other had a lower turnout."



Netanyahu's comments toward Israeli Arab voters were remarkable because they targeted Israeli citizens, and they quickly attracted accusations of racism. Israel's Arabs, who make up 20 percent of the population, have long complained of discrimination. A new joint list of Arab parties, unifying four factions, has energized Arab voters and is poised to make big gains in the race.



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Head of United Arab List Ayman Odeh (Photo: Elad Gershgoren)


Wadea Awawdeh, a resident of the Arab town of Kfar Kana, said Netanyahu "cannot hide his racist feelings toward the Arabs" anymore. "Netanyahu is angry because he feels he is losing. It's another indication he is losing in the elections and losing his patience," said Awawdeh.


Herzog - Netanyahu's main challenger - has promised to revive peace efforts with the Palestinians, repair ties with the US and reduce the growing gaps between rich and poor.


"Whoever wants to follow (Netanyahu's) path of despair and disappointment will vote for him," Herzog said after casting his vote. "But whoever wants change, hope, and really a better future for Israel, will vote the Zionist Union led by me."


That call resonated with 51-year-old businessman Ofer Benishti, who voted at a polling station in Kfar Saba in central Israel. He said he was a lifelong Likud voter but was now casting his ballot for the Zionist Union.


"I have had enough," said Benishti. "Bibi tried and tried and tried, but it just hasn't worked. It's time to give someone else a chance. It can't get worse than this," he said, using Netanyahu's nickname.


But Meshy Alon, 22, said she was sticking with the prime minister. "He is not great, but he is better than anything else out there," she said. "I can't vote for the left ... It's a Jewish country, not a Palestinian one."


Election officials said 45.5 percent of eligible voters had voted by the afternoon, a rate similar to previous years. Elections day is a public holiday in Israel - most people get off from work, beaches and restaurants fill up, and stores advertise election-day sales.


Facebook featured a special "I voted" button in Hebrew, as it has during elections in other countries, in an effort to get out the vote.


While exit poll results were expected after the end of voting at 10 pm, the true results may not be known for weeks.

Israelis vote for parties, not individual candidates. No party has ever won a majority in the 120-member parliament, so after an election, it can take weeks of negotiations to form a governing coalition.


Several smaller centrist and religious parties that have not pledged support for either Netanyahu or Herzog will likely tip the scales to determine who will become prime minister.

Netanyahu has governed for the past six years and has long been the most dominant personality in Israeli politics.
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He has swung further to the right in the final stages of the campaign, complaining of an international conspiracy funded by wealthy foreigners to oust him, and warning of a "left-wing government supported by the Arabs."

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This election season has amplified the bitter divide between hard-liners and moderates in Israel.

Earlier this month, tens of thousands of Israelis rallied in a central square in Tel Aviv where a former head of Israel's Mossad spy agency called for Netanyahu's ouster. And on Sunday, tens of thousands of right-wing Israelis filled the same square to hear Netanyahu and nationalist politicians speak

Netanyahu has appeared increasingly rattled, and after largly shunning the Israeli media for years, he gave a series of interviews to major Israeli television networks and small regional radio stations.

In a live phone interview on Israeli Channel 10 TV, Netanyahu ruled out a coalition with Herzog and said he would seek an alliance with the ultra-national Jewish Home party, which also opposes Palestinian statehood.

Netanyahu portrayed Herzog as someone who would easily give up territory for a Palestinian state. The Palestinians want to establish a state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

"We have a different approach," Netanyahu said. "They (the Zionist Union) want to withdraw. I don't want to withdraw. If I put together the government, it will be a nationalist government."

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LIVE BLOG: Netanyahu on election panel decision to ban his speech: 'No one will shut us up' - Israel election 2015 - Israel News | Haaretz

3:39 P.M. Lieberman: If you want to keep ISIS out of Israel, vote for me

Yisrael Beiteinu chairman Avigdor Lieberman, touring polling stations in Ashkelon, warned that a vote for any party other than his would amount to terrorist cells rising in Israel. "Whoever wants to prevent an ISIS branch and an Al-Qaida cell in Israel must vote for Yisrael Beiteinu," he said. (Haaretz)

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2:35 P.M. Lieberman responds to Netanyahu on Twitter

Avigdor Lieberman on Twitter: "Netanyahu also knows that if the Arabs are voting in droves, only a strong Lieberman can stop them." (Barak Ravid)

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:rofl:
 
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LIVE BLOG: Netanyahu on election panel decision to ban his speech: 'No one will shut us up' - Israel election 2015 - Israel News | Haaretz

3:39 P.M. Lieberman: If you want to keep ISIS out of Israel, vote for me

Yisrael Beiteinu chairman Avigdor Lieberman, touring polling stations in Ashkelon, warned that a vote for any party other than his would amount to terrorist cells rising in Israel. "Whoever wants to prevent an ISIS branch and an Al-Qaida cell in Israel must vote for Yisrael Beiteinu," he said. (Haaretz)

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2:35 P.M. Lieberman responds to Netanyahu on Twitter

Avigdor Lieberman on Twitter: "Netanyahu also knows that if the Arabs are voting in droves, only a strong Lieberman can stop them." (Barak Ravid)

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:rofl:


Isn't Lieberman a worst hard liner than Netanyahu ?
 
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The White House administration would like to see PM Netanyahu lose.
 
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@Falcon29 There is a large Community of Culturally Middle Eastren Jewish called Mizrahi Jews. How is the relations of Palestinian and Mizrahi Jews?
 
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Isn't Lieberman a worst hard liner than Netanyahu ?

I can't tell if he's more hardline or just a troll. :lol:

@Falcon29 There is a large Community of Culturally Middle Eastren Jewish called Mizrahi Jews. How is the relations of Palestinian and Mizrahi Jews?

I know someone in Gaza who's married to a Mizrahi Jewish girl. Although I never met myself. Gaza is isolated so we can't enter either West bank or Israel. Other Palestinians probably do know them well.
 
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I know someone in Gaza who's married to a Mizrahi Jewish girl. Although I never met myself. Gaza is isolated so we can't enter either West bank or Israel. Other Palestinians probably do know them well.
So you dont have any links with Israeli Arabs as well. Thanks for reply I have heard that they have introduce quite a lot of Arab Cousins to Israel and also impacted Israel Culture a lot. Arabs and Palestinians in Israel should work with them on a cultural Front to achieve some of their Objectives.
 
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10 facts about Israel's elections and the Palestinian vote
Ben White

Wednesday, 11 March 2015 15:45
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Ben White



On 17 March, Israelis will go to the polls to elect a new government. Here are 10 facts about the Knesset elections and the Palestinian vote.

1. One in seven Palestinians can vote in Israel's elections.
Only one in seven of the total Palestinian population live inside Israel's pre-1967 borders and have citizenship. A third live under Israeli military rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and can't vote (though the Jewish settlers living among them can). Meanwhile, around half of all Palestinians are prevented from returning to their homeland by Israel; expelled and denationalised, their forced exclusion is the reason why the majority of Israel's citizens are Jewish.

2. Israel has only ever had two non-Jewish ministers.
Since the creation of Israel in 1948, around 600 ministers have served in 33 governments. Only two of them have been non-Jews, and they served for a combined total of approximately three years.

3. No Arab party has ever been part of a ruling coalition.
After the 2013 elections, centrist Yair Lapid explicitly ruled out forming a tactical alliance with Arab parties, saying he would "not join a blocking majority with Haneen Zoabis" – a reference to the Palestinian MK from Balad. It is not impossible, however, that this time around they could be invited to form part of a ruling coalition or, that Palestinian MKs could recommend the Zionist Union's Isaac Herzog, Netanyahu's main challenger for premier, to President Reuven Rivlin.

4. Palestinian voter participation is expected to rise.
Voter turnout among Palestinian citizens of Israel is set to rise, and could return to levels not seen since the 1990s. In 2013, voter participation was 56 percent – in 1999, it was 75 percent. One of the key factors is the decision by Arab parties to form an alliance, the Joint List (Balad, Ta'al, United Arab List, and Hadash, a joint Jewish-Arab party).

5. Some Palestinian factions urge a boycott of Knesset elections.
Political groups that advocate a boycott of the elections include the Islamic Movement's northern branch, led by Sheikh Raed Salah, and the Abn'a el-Balad movement, along with unaffiliated activists and student campaigners.

6. The Arab parties' Joint List will boost votes.
In 2013, Arab parties secured a combined 11 seats in the Knesset. This time round, the Joint List could gain as many as 15 MKs in the new parliament. The new electoral threshold is 3.25 percent of the vote, up from 2 percent last time around.

7. Palestinian voters worry about employment, education, discrimination.
The main issues facing Palestinian citizens of Israel are economic concerns (i.e. unemployment and job creation), education, town and regional planning restrictions, home demolitions (especially in the Negev), racist or ultra-nationalist legislation, and other issues that stem from the structural discrimination faced by non-Jews.

8. Palestinian MK Haneen Zoabi was initially disqualified from running.
Israel's Central Elections Committee voted to ban two candidates: Haneen Zoabi – by 27 votes to 6 – and far-right Jewish nationalist Baruch Marzel – by 17 votes to 16. Both decisions were overturned by the High Court, though Zoabi's disqualification was backed by most candidates – including the Zionist Union's Isaac Herzog. Under Israeli law, a candidate or party can be banned from the elections for, among other things, negating the existence of Israel as a 'Jewish state'.

9. Knesset rules restrict Palestinian MKs' ability to challenge structural discrimination.
Knesset rules of procedure mean that proposed bills which undermine Israel's existence as the state of the Jewish people – as opposed to all its citizens – are thrown out.

10. Palestinian MKs are often targeted for political persecution.
Once in the Knesset, Palestinian MKs are frequent targets for politically-motivated persecution. In the past, this has included suspensions from the Knesset, investigations for visiting an 'enemy state', and criminal prosecutions based on trumped-up charges. More broadly, the Shin Bet is on record as stating it thwarts activities of any group seeking to undermine Israel's Jewish character, while in 2008, the internal security agency's then-chief Yuval Diskin, told US officials that many of the "Arab-Israeli population" are taking their rights "too far."
 
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