Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Surprise...ELECTIONS! Yesh Atid!

Elections don't go as Planned. Huge Upset for Bibi. Lapid may make coalition. Netanyahu will try to Make Widest Coalition Possible.
These are just some of the headlines from the past 24 hours...

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The elections are over and all the votes (minus the soldiers and those from prisons) have been counted. So there's a new prime minister, right? Well, not quite. When it comes to a parliamentary democracy, nothing is that simple. What with the sheet number of parties, not to mention the fact that the vote is currently tied between the right and the left, 60/60 (but more on that later), a much longer process has been set into motion. That is, each time an election occurs in Israel, it is for a party, and only afterwards can the real fun begin. Therefore, once all the votes have been tallied, the president, Shimon Peres will be tasked with selecting the first person to attempt a coalition. Why, you might ask?
In Israel, politics are not as cut and dry as they are in the states. For a much better explanation, click here (Israeli Embassy explanation). However, for the purposes of this note, just know that the President must take recommendations from all of the newly elected K’nesset members (the number of seats each party gets is directly correlated with the percentage of votes they receive in the election – hence voting for a party, not a candidate) as to who they want to be tasked with creating the next coalition. Then, the fun begins. That individual (along with everyone else in the K’nesset must work to make a coalition of a simple majority, or more than 61 seats. The more center the coalition, the stronger it seems to be.
            Herein lies the problem. The K’nesset currently sits with 60 seats in the center-left block (including Arab parties who will not necessarily or ever join a coalition) and 60 in the right block (with the religious parties who are much more center than right and would even potentially join a center-left coalition). (Click here to get a good representation of Haaretz's mocking image of the parties and here for an article with visual representations of what the different options are for coalitions and what they entail). So basically, there is a draw and only God know what the results will be (or Bibi if he has already finagled a pretty-little Yesh Atid/Habayit haYehudi coalition to go along with Likud Beiteinu). The fun thing is, we don’t know. There will be 21 days during which everyone talks and negotiates, trying to figure out if they are willing to compromise (will the left ditch the settlement issue they so desperately want settled in favor of joining a centerist government and attention paid to education/housing demands? Will the right loosen its super-strength hold on security and allocate some of the security money towards education and housing?). With all of these questions, I look forward to following twitter, ynetnew.com, haaretz.com, and jpost.com.
            The real question that I’m asking myself, since when did I develop an interest in politics? Honestly, I’m not sure if the interest comes from politics, or from Israel. The fact that I am living here, surrounded by people who really do love politics and understand them, means I am truly surrounded by the information. We were getting it in class, in the news, in the papers, and from friends and family. The long and short of it was, how could I not feel the excitement (a war, an election, possibly a failing coalition…) and therefore the desire to be involved was born.
            On election day, we were sent in groups of three or four to different cities around Israel. My group went to Rishon L’tzion, the fourth largest city in Israel and one of the first settlements in the 1880’s. Getting off the bus, we immediately noticed how warm it was (higher than 70 degrees in January!) and how empty the town seemed to be. Talking to people at this time of morning, around 8:30, was easy, because no one else was around and people were still in good moods due to the morning. The streets were basically empty and we got a great idea of what the city (and Jerusalem, before we left) would look like if the apocolypse came but everything remained in tact (or what would happen on Shabbat).
We walked down the streets, talking to people, trying to figure out the political climate of the area. After a few people, we finally got directions to a few schools and went down to check them out. Not only had we actually found schools, we were able to go in and see the polling booth (but we couldn’t take pictures). As we were already there, I asked questions about how the voting actually worked, who voted when, why certain people voted at certain schools, why there were four people sitting in one room, etc. They loved the questions, because it meant a break in the monotony of the day, and we enjoyed getting our questions answered and learning about the elections as they were happening.
            Speaking in Hebrew, and truly understanding what was going on was great! I had the opportunity to talk to people, ask them their opinions on the political spectrum, and get a variety of answers, all without the pressure of speaking correctly. The best part of it was that many or most of them didn’t speak English, so I had to communicate in Hebrew. Although obvious that I am not a great Hebrew speaker, everyone we talked to remained patient and understood me.
            My all time favorite person to whom we spoke was an old man, probably about 85. I approached him because we were looking for a school to find polling places, but he didn’t have any information and started to send us away. I wasn’t letting him off that easily and so started asking about who he had voted for and why. He voted for Shelly, well, for Likud, because he had “always voted for them.” But the story he then told me afterwards (the entire 4:30 minute saga) was about how he had served in every war since the founding of the country, having come here from Poland despite rabbis giving money to go everywhere else. Not only that, but he has a vendetta against the religious, who “study Talmud all day and get the same amount of money I do, maybe 100 nis less, and for what, studying Torah? They don’t deserve it. We need to make this country more reasonable.” As he spoke, he kept stepping closer and closer to me, and became increasingly more unsure that we were understanding. At some point, I was done listening and smelling his breath, so excused us and moved on.
            There were two other pretty interesting ones. One was a woman who said she wasn’t voting because none of the candidates had anything important that she needed. And besides, they weren’t going to do anything for her anyway (or so she thought). Another person told me he wanted Yair Lapid because he would work with Bibi from within, making the changes that actually need to be made. He would make sure Bibi focuses on the important issues and truly gets things like education and housing taken care of. Lastly, a young man said he had voted for Yair Lapid because Lapid was going to get this specific guy appointed as minister of sport, and that was what really mattered.
            We stopped for lunch, so we could transfer all our videos to one place and start making the movie we were required to make as part of our assignment for the day (in fact, that was the only reason we were allowed into the polling place, by telling them this was required homework) (To watch the video click here). At the table next to us was a young religious couple with their infant. I played with him, and of course started talking to the couple. After explaining what our purpose in Rishon was, I asked for whom they had cast their vote. The woman said her husband had voted for HaBayit HaYehudi (I don’t know why…he just did) and she had voted for Shas (“Because that’s who I always vote for…”). This country sometimes doesn’t make sense.
            All I can say is, I’m not necessarily sure I know who I would have voted for, I just know I wouldn’t have been a gung-ho party supporter.

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