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Friday, March 19, 2010

78 MK's support letter urging Netanyahu to stand up to Obama

78 of Israel's 120 Knesset members are supporting a letter to Prime Minister Netanyahu urging him to stand up to President Obama and continue building in Jerusalem. The MK's come from across the political spectrum.
The letter, written in advance of the premier’s departure for the annual AIPAC policy conference in Washington, called on Netanyahu to stand strong regarding Israeli sovereignty in the Jewish neighborhoods.

Four dozen MKs signed on to the brief letter, stating that “we, the undersigned members of Knesset, who represent different approaches and world-views regarding the desirable permanent-status arrangement, are unified behind the policy of all Israeli governments to this day, regarding our attachment to the historical and national areas of Jerusalem and the right of the State of Israel to actualize our control in its Jewish neighborhoods in all parts of the city – neighborhoods that constitute an inseparable part of Jerusalem that will remain in our hands in any future permanent status arrangement.

“We support the continuation of building and development in all of the neighborhoods without any restriction or delay,” the letter affirmed.

“The importance of the letter is to strengthen Israel through actualizing its authority over our capital, Jerusalem,” said MK Otniel Schneller (Kadima), who initiated the missive. “This is not meant to oppose our greatest friend, the United States of America, but rather to present through the letter the most basic common consensus in Israeli society, which is the force behind and the key to an agreement on any peace process.”

Schneller said that Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin’s office would present the letter to Netanyahu before the premier left for the annual AIPAC policy conference in Washington next week.

Schneller said that 78 of the 120 members of Knesset had already expressed their support for the missive, and that the only parties that had not signed on to the letter or expressed support were the three Arab parties and Meretz.

Thirty of those who did express support – including Rivlin and ministers from Likud, Labor, Israel Beiteinu, Habayit Hayehudi, Shas and UTJ – were prohibited, under Knesset guidelines, from signing on to any petition, due to their positions within the government. Rivlin did, however, include a letter of his own, as did Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman Tzahi Hanegbi (Kadima).

Although Labor ministers expressed support for the letter, and at least one deputy minister was poised to sign it late Thursday evening, none of the party’s more left-leaning rank-and-file MKs signed. Several members of Kadima also signed.
Heh. That will at least show Obama that we're united against his positions on Jerusalem.

4 Comments:

At 5:03 PM, Blogger Mr. Gerson said...

Why only 78 out of 120?

That isn't even a 2/3rd majority.

 
At 5:06 PM, Blogger Mr. Gerson said...

Ah, possibly there were 108 our of 120...
Do you know about the remaining 12?

 
At 6:13 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

The only Jewish party in Israel not committed to a united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty is Meretz and its on the way to complete extinction.

Heh

 
At 2:22 AM, Blogger NormanF said...

Gershon... there's Meretz and the Arab parties which have nine seats between them and then you have the Labor rebels. So you already have 20 MKs not committed to a united Jerusalem. The national consensus does cross all lines in Israel and those who write as though Israel will relinquish its claim to Jerusalem don't know the country at all. That goes for Eric Yoffie and what's left of Reform Judaism. Its a sad sight.

 

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