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Friday, April 22, 2011

Israel's dwindling Left

Earlier this week, I reported that a group of 'intellectuals' planned to sign a call for a 'Palestinian state' in the same hall in Tel Aviv in which Israel's 1948 Declaration of Independence was signed. While I made plain in that post that I disagreed with them, I did not give you any indication of how many other Israelis did.

The 'signing' took place on Thursday, and the JPost reports that 'dozens' of Israelis came out to protest. We have no indication of whether the protesters exceeded the signers and their supporters, but it is possible that they did. Even in Tel Aviv, which is the last remaining bastion of the Left. But in an editorial today, the Post ties that event in Tel Aviv to the Left's deeply declining popularity in Israel.

At this writing that editorial is not yet online (I read it in the paper edition). I will try to post a link to it once it is online. But here are some key facts you need to know:

1. A survey taken in March shows that if elections were held today, the Right wing parties (including the ultra-Orthodox parties) would receive 71 seats in the Knesset, compared with 39 for the Left. In the current Knesset, it's 65-45. The other 10 seats are held by Arab parties. That means that more than two thirds of Israeli Jews identify themselves as Right.

2. If elections were held today, Defense Minister Ehud Barak's breakoff party from Labor, which is called the Independence party, would not win a single seat in the Knesset. Technically, that doesn't mean that he couldn't be Defense Minister. Practically, it makes it very unlikely. Given that Barak is blocking construction in Judea and Samaria, this could actually give the Right an incentive to bring the government down if Netanyahu says something they don't like in Washington.

3. Most Israelis disagree with Barack Obama's claim that this is the time for new 'peace initiatives.' The same March survey (taken by the Smith agency for Globes, which means it's about as neutral as you're going to get in this country) says that 70% of Israelis don't want any new 'peace initiatives' as opposed to 28% who do. That pretty much agrees with the Right-Left identification in paragraph 1.

4. The Post continues to believe that most Israelis would make significant concessions for 'peace,' but they don't see 'peace' happening. The reason that most Israelis are willing to make concessions is in order to keep Israel 'Jewish and Democratic,' although at least their willingness to make concessions doesn't extend to national suicide. In practical terms, that willingness to make concessions is meaningless, because (a) peace isn't happening and (b) Israelis have been sold straw rather than gold on the demographic issue. Most Israelis are still living in the Left's conception of demographics, which is based on the lies and half truths issued by the 'Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.' If Israelis knew the truth (which I view as my duty to get out), they would tell the 'Palestinians' to put their 'state' where the sun don't shine.

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2 Comments:

At 10:27 AM, Blogger The Caped Crusader said...

Hi Carl, thanks for this!

Speaking as someone that was there, I can tell you that they outnumbered us, but we were more powerful. They had PA systems (that's Public Announcement, not Palestinian Authority, although they could have a hand in this, you never know!) but we still made our voices heard.

I found the location of the signing significant, akin to the attempt to delegitimise our connection to Jerusalem. Akin to the international left's attempt to rewrite the history of the state and accuse us of 'ethnic cleansing', among other things.

This in itself is akin to the Taliban's detonation of the Buddhist statues in Bamiyan, Afghanistan in 2001.

But I took some pics as well and uploaded them to facebook, more details there:

https://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/media/set/fbx/?set=a.220882771261144.70072.154480641234691

Shabat shalom

 
At 11:20 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

And the stupid antics like by the folks of Machsom Watch to sympathize with the murderers of the Fogel family puts the Israeli Far Left far out the Jewish mainstream.

There is no viable political party in Israel that can run on their platform of collective national suicide and govern in the future.

The Western media has no real understanding of Israel and the views of the Jewish majority about the likelihood of peace in our generation. It should be noted in passing the only real source of pressure on Netanyahu to produce a "new" peace initiative comes from the Quartet.

There is no such popular groundswell for one at home in Israel.

 

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