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The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

(Bloomberg) -- Polls ahead of Israel’s Sept. 17 election suggest a tight race between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud and former military chief Benny Gantz’s Blue and White. But in Israel’s fractured political landscape, it takes more than a single party to rule, so the real tension will be over who can line up the biggest bloc of parliamentary seats.

The election is the second in five months after Netanyahu failed to form a coalition following April balloting. The key decider may be former Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman of Yisrael Beiteinu, who last time refused to join Netanyahu's government. Other potential players include Israel's ultra-Orthodox parties, United Torah Judaism and Shas. They command roughly 15% of parliamentary seats between them and have been mainstays in Netanyahu governments, while the Joint List, which represents Israel's Arab minority, has signaled some support for Gantz.

Netanyahu’s political survival has dominated a campaign largely bereft of issues, though corruption allegations dogging the premier remain solidly in the background. The once-central question of peace with the Palestinians barely registers on the radar because many Israelis doubt it’s possible at this time. On security matters, Gantz and Netanyahu both see a need to retain war-won territory the Palestinians seek for a state. But Gantz has become a magnet for many desperate for a change after a cumulative 13 years of Netanyahu rule.

Here are the parties and leaders making their case before Israeli voters.

Likud

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Israel’s leading right-wing party, places primary importance on security
Leader: Benjamin Netanyahu
Major policies:
– Pushing agressive military and diplomatic campaigns against Iran, which poses Israel’s biggest strategic threat
– Continoing occupation of West Bank amid skepticism that direct negotiations with current Palestinian leadership can work
– Unilaterally annexing Jewish settlements and key security areas in the West Bank, as well as supporting a united Jerusalem as Israel’s capital
– Free-market economic policies
Final polling: 33 seats 
How it fared last election: 35 seats

Blue & White

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Centrist party led by three ex-military chiefs and a former finance minister
Leader: Benny Gantz
Major policies: 
– Willingness to enter peace negotiations with Palestinian leadership
– Annexing Jewish settlements, a united Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, security control over key West Bank areas in any future settlement with Palestinians
– Weakening religious influence in Israel’s social and commercial laws
– A blend of free-market economic policies and a marked increase in social spending
Final polling: 32 seats
How it fared last election: 35 seats

Joint List

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Alliance of ideologically diverse Arab parties
Leader: Ayman Odeh
Major policies: 
– Dismantling all Jewish settlements and ending Israel’s occupation in the West Bank 
– Creating a Palestinian state in territories Israel captured in 1967
– Increasing investment in Israel’s Arab communities
Final polling: 12 seats
How it fared last election: Didn’t run as presently constituted

Yamina

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Bloc of right-wing groups that want to strengthen Jewish character of the state
Leader: Ayelet Shaked
Major policies: 
– Opposing the creation of a Palestinian state, instead favoring the annexation of most of the West Bank
– Weakening the High Court’s ability to strike down laws passed in parliament
Final polling: 9 seats
How it fared last election: Member parties didn’t run under this configuration

Yisrael Beiteinu

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Secular right-wing party that seeks to weaken religious influence over the state
Leader: Avigdor Liberman
Major policies: 
– Forcing the rapidly growing ultra-Orthodox minority to contribute more to Israeli society, such as by doing compulsory military service
– Settling the conflict with Palestinians as part of an overall peace deal with the Arab world, which would include population transfers
– More stringent rules of deterrence against terrorism, such as death sentences for those convicted
Final polling: 8 seats
How it fared last election: 5 seats

United Torah Judaism

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Grouping that favors strengthening religious influence in Israel’s social and commercial laws
Leader: Yaakov Litzman
Major policies: 
– Rejecting compulsory military service for ultra-Orthodox men and seeking higher benefits for its community
– On matters of security and diplomacy, generally aligning with right-wing stances
Final polling: 7 seats
How it fared last election: 8 seats

Shas

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Party that seeks to redress discrimination against Jews of North African and Middle Eastern descent
Leader: Aryeh Deri
Major policies: 
– Calling for more settlement construction in the West Bank, and a united Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in a future agreement with the Palestinians
– Increased religious involvement in domestic matters
Final polling: 8 seats
How it fared last election: 8 seats

Democratic Union

Description: Left-wing bloc that wants to unseat Netanyahu, preserve Israel’s democratic principles
Leader: Nitzan Horowitz
Major policies: 
– Defending the current powers of Israel’s High Court
– Negotiating with the Palestinians to reach a two-state solution

– Full separation between religion and state

 – Stopping privatization and other social-democratic economic policies

Final polling: 6 seats
How it fared last election: Member parties didn’t run under this configuration

Labor-Gesher

The Players and Parties as Israel Votes

Description: Alliance focused on reducing Israel’s economic inequality
Leader: Amir Peretz
Major policies: 
– Increased spending on poorer communities, massive government housing projects and raising the minimum wage
Final polling: 5 seats
How it fared last election:  6 seats (as Labor Party)

Note: Poll data based on survey carried out between the night of Sept. 12 and the morning of Sept. 13; voter opinions may have changed. Smith Consulting polled 650 people, and its finding were published by the Jerusalem Post and Maariv newspapers on Sept. 13. The margin of error was 3.9%.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anne Swardson at aswardson@bloomberg.net, Amy TeibelPaul Sillitoe

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