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Israel: Sharon pushes through austerity budget
By David Cohen and Chris Marsden
23 May 2002
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Israels prime minister Ariel Sharons political
gamble of firing ministers and deputy ministers from Shas and
United Torah Judaism has paid-off, by the governments emergency
economic austerity programme passing on its second reading. It
had first met with defeat by a vote of 47-44 due to a no vote
by the two ultra-Orthodox parties.
In total, Sharon dismissed four Shas ministers and five deputy
ministers from Shas and United Torah Judaism. The fifth Shas minister,
who is not a member of parliament, said he would resign in solidarity.
The action took place on May 21, after the economic bill was defeated
the previous evening. But the sackings will not come in to effect
until midnight on May 22, which still allows Sharon to hope for
a climb down on the part of the two ultra-Orthodox parties.
Shas chairman Eli Yishai said, If the prime minister
is open to negotiations we will negotiate. But Knesset spokesman
Giora Pordes insisted that no changes would be made to the bill.
Shas was not in attendance for the second reading.
Expelling the two parties will cut Sharons majority to
just 60 seats out of a total of 120. A single additional defection
could mean losing a vote of no confidence, leading to early elections.
Shas, with 17 seats, is the third-largest party in the parliament
after Labour, with 23 seats, and Sharons Likud with 19.
United Torah Judaism has five seats.
Sharon hopes to secure a larger majority by bringing the nominally
liberal party Shinui (Change), which holds six seats, into his
coalition of national unity. Shinui was built upon
a secular platform and has told Sharon that it will join his government
only after the ultra-Orthodox parties quit. He is also seeking
to bring back the far-right National Religious Party into the
fold, which represents the interests of Jewish settlers in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The earlier defeat of the economic programme stunned the government,
as it had seemed assured of a majority only moments before the
vote. Several Knesset members from the Labour Party abstained
from the votedespite the faction's decision earlier that
day to support the bill in first reading. Shas and United Torah
Judaism had both said they would not support the plan unless a
planned 24 percent cut in child allowances for families that do
not serve in the army was removed. While Labour said it would
not support the plan unless this item was left in. Other senior
ministers, including Likud members, also made a show of opposing
the budget.
Sharons economic plan is easily the most austere devised
since the days of Binjamin Netanyahus government. The $US2.7
billion emergency economic package is aimed at reducing a growing
deficit caused by higher defence spending during the 19-month-old
Palestinian uprising and a general lowering of tax revenues due
to the downturn in the Israeli economy.
The austerity package of tax increases and welfare cuts is
designed to pay for Israels continued military operations
against the Palestinians, but the economy is in dire straits.
The plan calls for widening the budget deficit to 3.9 percent
of GDP from the present three percent. The government warned that
the deficit could grow to six percent and affect Israels
credit rating if it was not adopted.
It includes, six billion shekel ($US1.25 billion) in spending
cuts, three billion shekel ($US625 million) in tax rises, a wage
freeze in the public sector and four percent cuts in social security
payments. Almost one billion NIS will be cut from childrens
allowances. The allowance will be even lower for Arab children
and will be reduced for each additional child. Sharons plan
to deal with the mass unemployment is based upon the Wisconsin
Plan: a system of workfare pioneered in the United States which
will encourage people to work and not to get money from
the state, as senior governments officials said. More
than 200,000 people in Israel have no job, and only some of them
can get a monthly income from the state, which is less than the
minimum salary.
Sharons plan will make the conditions for receiving unemployment
benefits more restrictive. Today, one must have worked six months
in order to get six months of benefits from the state after having
been fired. The new plan wants to increase the number of months
that a worker needs to have been in permanent employment from
six to 12.
In addition, many benefits granted to the most deprived layers
will be reduced. For example, single-parent families will receive
a maximum of $US127 housing benefit, instead of the present $US248
per month.
Only Israeli citizens who serve in the Israeli Defence Forces
(IDF) will get full state benefits, a proviso that will hit Arab
families (Israel doesnt allow Palestinian Arabs to serve
as IDF soldiers) and the Jewish Orthodox community, which is exempt
from military service. Both these groups are amongst the poorest
in Israel, and Shas and United Torah Judaism have both posed as
defenders of the poor in order to safeguard their religious-based
constituency.
The governmental crisis for Sharon has underlined once again
Likuds political reliance on Labour. Not merely the passing
of the economic plan, but the very survival of Sharons government
depends on Labours support. Without Labour, Sharon would
not be able to wage his war against the Palestinians or implement
his anti-working class economic agenda. Time and again Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres, Defence Minister Binjamin Ben-Eliezer and
other senior politicians from the Labour have pledged their loyalty
to Sharons government in defiance of calls within the party
to quit. The daily Maariv newspaper praised Sharon
and denounced Shas for having dared torpedo the economic
plan that is vital to save the Israeli economy. Its commentator,
Shalom Yerushalmi, then went on to point out, Sharon is
back to relying on the rickety crutch known as the Labour Party,
a coalition partner that gave him only half its votes yesterday
[in the first reading of the bill].
Yediot Aharonot, in contrast, attacked the government for its
bitter failure (and disgrace) for having actually
increased the budget deficit and for having no real unity of purpose
other than waging war against the Palestinians.
See Also:
What the Likud vote reveals about Israels
real intentions
[18 May 2002]
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
the dead-end of Zionism
[16 May 2002]
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