Posted on 02/10/2009 12:20:41 PM PST by Free ThinkerNY
Exit polls by Israel's three main television stations on Tuesday night showed Kadima as the clear winner in the 2009 general elections, with Likud coming a narrow second.
Channel 1, Channel 2 and Channel 10 polling of voters as they left the ballot box all showed victory for Kadima, headed by Tzipi Livni.
(Excerpt) Read more at haaretz.com ...
Let my People Go!
Israel is a coalition government. I have read that it is likely that Kadima will not be able to form a coalition and Bibi will likely be asked to form one from Likud and one of the far-right parties.
All is not lost unless Likud gets a clear majority of seats in the Kenesset....which is 66 I think.
I want to watch Obama/Mitchell/Clinton try to mussle around Benjamin Netanyahu.
If skillfully handled, the Republicans could turn this into a fight between Obama and Clinton as to what happens visa-vie
US foreign policy toward Israel.
to be fair, American Jews sold out Israel first...
Nothing odd about it. Netanyahu is much more popular in USA and FReepdom than he is in Israel. He’s very Clinton-like and just not trusted. Bibi may end up with a winning coalition, however, as Livni and Labour might have to rely on Arab parties non-opposition to them and on Jewish “religious” parties extracting a very high price.
According to Channel 1, the right-wing bloc won 63 Knesset seats and the left wing 57; Channel 2 predicted 64 for the right and 56 for the left; and Channel 10, like Channel 1, predicted 63 and 57.
The three exit polls, on average, found Shas to be the fifth largest party with 9-10 seats, followed by United Torah Judaism with 5, Meretz 4-5, Chadash 4, Jewish Home 3-4, National Union 3, Balad 2-3 and Ra'am Ta'al with 2-4 mandates.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1233304741384&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Wheil things are bad here economically, what Israel is facing is simply staggering as it relates to survival.
The Obama Administration is no friend of Tel Aviv, no matter which party is in power there.
I thought Israeli Prime Ministers were directly elected.
Couldn’t Likud form a coalition with Yisraeli and Labor?
So did I.
It's a parliamentary system, the Prime Minister isn't directly elected, rather the head of the political party able to form a coalition, usually the party winning the largest number of seats. Labor is to the left of Kadima, unlikely to get along with Likud, but any sort of a coalition could be put together. Yisrael Beiteinu (16), Shas (9-10), United Torah (5), National Union (3), Jewish Home (3-4) would be the logical right wing candidates, which gets Likud to 62-64. To put together a government Livni would need to sweep all other parties, including the Arab parties, and get one or two of the right wing parties to break ranks. Always possible, they negotiate these things by offering cabinet posts and government benefits.
The President (Peres) is directly elected, and will be the one to decide who gets the first shot at forming a government, Livni or Bibi. The heads of each of the parties are elected in a separate election, a few months ago. In todays election, voters vote for a party, though obviously the campaign revolves about individuals.
Thanks SJ, didn’t know how it worked.
Use this cool Electoral Compass to see who you should pick for Prime Minister given your stance on the issues.
Download the Party Platforms | View Current Political Posters (with Translation)
|
Left |
Left of Center |
Centrist |
Right of Center |
Right |
Major Parties |
|
|
|||
Small Parties |
· Meretz · Hadash |
· Gil |
· Shas |
||
New Parties |
|||||
|
The small parties are listed in alphabetical order according to their Hebrew name and the translation appears in parentheses.
|
Political Party |
# Knesset Seats |
Kadima |
29 |
Labor-Meimad |
19 |
Likud |
12 |
Shas |
12 |
Yisrael Beitenu |
11 |
Ichud Leumi - Mafdal |
9 |
Gil Pensioners Party |
7 |
Torah and Shabbat Judaism |
6 |
Meretz |
5 |
United Arab List - Arab Renewal |
4 |
Hadash |
3 |
National Democratic Assembly |
3 |
Total |
120 |
FoxNews is reporting that Livni’s party Kadima, eked out a very slim victory against, Likud, Netanyahu’s party.
With other right-wing parties making very strong showings, and Labor, with Barak, going down the toilet, it is likely that it will be Bibi who will form the new government.
IMO, the right wing parties will not coalesce around Livni. She is no Golda Meir, and a leftist, feminist lesbian to boot.
Hope you are right. Israel has a Parliamentary system, and the winner will have to bring along a coalition to reach 61 votes.
This will likely be Netanyahu. The right wing block has increased in size tom 62-64.
Michael Medved is reporting that Israeli president Shimon Peres, will likely ask Netanyahu to form the next government.
We see Israeli Jews share the desire with American Jews, The PLO, HAMAS and Hezbollah to see the end of Israel.
I hate to tell you this, but that's a bad joke. There is actually a strong, influential national Jewish Republican organization named the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC), with steadily increasing membership, a national office in DC within a short walk from the Capitol, four regional offices and local chapters in about 50 cities/metro areas around the country. The web site is rjchq.org .
Several FReepers are members and all Jewish Republicans are invited to join and participate.
Livni a lesbian? Never heard of that before. She’s not all that attractive, but she doesn’t look like one offhand. I would think that her opponents might have figured that out by now if such were the case.
How the heck would they know? I'm sure, since the race is close, the exit poll results are within the margin of error. Plus, as I understand it, the voting is done with paper ballots. It will undoubtedly take more than a few hours to count up 5 million or so paper ballots.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.