News | Tammuz 13, 5769 / July 5, '09 | |
![]() A Likud lawyer outside the rolling ballot box Israel News Photo: (Channel 2 TV News) ![]() Check It Out More ![]() | Published: 12/16/08, 12:34 PM Likud Voting Continues: Netanyahu's Traveling Ballot Boxby Nissan Ratzlav-Katz (IsraelNN.com) Likud Chairman Binyamin Netanyahu is seeking the approval of the Likud Central Committee members for the As explained by Dr. Aaron Lerner, Director of the Independent Media Review and Analysis (IMRA) organization, absorbing a new party would add its campaign funds to Likud coffers and also push Manhigut Yehudit's Moshe Feiglin and others further down on the Likud list by reserving at least one top slot for a representative of the incorporated party. If the deal is approved, then the other party's candidates would not have to stand for election by Likud party members in order to enter the Knesset list. Channel 2 News correspondent Amit Segal tracked down one of seven rental cars carrying the ballot boxes, driven by a Likud-employed lawyer, in the city of Modi'in. The lawyer pursued a Likud Central Committee member with her ballot box all the way to the Azrieli Mall in order to obtain the member's vote. This system, Segal said, is a completely original Netanyahu innovation that may well be illegal. "Miraculously," Segal quipped, "they are only making it to addresses of Netanyahu supporters. Supporters of Feiglin and Silvan Shalom, for example, have not received this take-away democratic service." Segal quoted a source close to Netanyahu as saying, "The voting will continue until we win." Dr. Lerner notes that there have recently been discussions between Likud leaders and representatives of the Tzomet party on unification. Tzomet was founded as a right-wing, but militantly secularist party by General Rafael ("Raful") Eitan in 1987. It has been functioning as a party in name only ever since the 2003 elections. Two members of Tzomet defected from the party to support the Oslo Accords in 1993, which is the only way the agreements with the PLO were able to obtain Knesset approval. In 1996, the Tzomet party ran as a joint list with the Likud and the now-defunct Gesher party. Discuss this article in the new Politics & Elections forum. Sign up to receive the Daily Israel Report by email (Free) © IsraelNN Syndications - This article may not be republished freely. Review what you can publish free of charge and what requires a syndication payment on the Syndications Page.
| ![]() ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |