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Israel: social crisis underlies collapse of Likud-Labour coalition
By Jean Shaoul
5 November 2002
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Behind the collapse of Ariel Sharons twenty-month-old
national unity government is a stark social and economic polarisation
within Israel. The withdrawal of the Labour Party from government
paves the way for escalating class conflicts as Sharon attempts
to stitch together a new coalition based on an even narrower right-wing
social base.
The Labour-Likud coalition collapsed October 30 when the six
Labour Party ministers, led by party leader and Defence Minister
Benyamin Ben-Eliezer, walked out in protest over Sharons
funding of Zionist settlements in the West Bank. Sharon had refused
to transfer some $147 million from the West Bank settlements to
social welfare programmes within Israel, despite mounting economic
hardships for Israeli workers.
Sharons austerity package, introduced at the behest of
big business, called for Israels largest ever budget cuts.
The thrust of the budget was to place the full burden of Israels
war against the Palestinians, which is costing $2 billion a year
and compounding the countrys worst ever economic crisis,
on the backs of the most vulnerable members of society.
Without the support of Labours 25 parliamentary delegates,
Sharons government can count on only 55 votes in the 120-seat
legislature. Sharon was only able to survive a November 4 vote
of no-confidence and avoid calling a new election because the
ultra-nationalist bloc, the National Union-Yisrael Beitenu Party,
which Sharon hopes to bring into his government, abstained.
The economic crisis
While hostilities between Israelis and Palestinians have dominated
the headlines for the last two years, little attention has been
paid by the international media to the increasingly explosive
economic and social situation within Israel.
The economy that was growing at 6 percent a year just three
years ago is now contracting. The high-tech industry, once the
engine of Israels growth, has taken a battering as a result
of the bursting of the dot.com bubble.
Foreign investment has fallen by two thirds and revenues from
tourism have halved, undermining Israels currency, the shekel.
Inflation is now at 8 percent. Unemployment has risen to 10.5
percent and is expected to reach 12 percent in 2003. The Central
Bureau of Statistics has forecast a 2.9 percent fall in per capita
gross domestic product.
So parlous are Israels finances that two weeks ago Sharon
himself flew to London, without telling any of his ministers,
to try to prevent Fitch, the ratings agency, from downgrading
Israels credit. Such a development would threaten Israels
ability to finance its debt. This is what underlies Sharons
plea for the US to provide loan guarantees of $10 billion and
his determination to impose the austerity budget that investors
are demanding.
The budget, which cuts spending for 2003 by 2 percent, slashes
benefits to the unemployed, pensioners and single-parent families,
under conditions where at least 20 percent of the population depend
upon some form of social assistance. It includes measures aimed
at deporting 50,000 immigrant workers from Romania, China and
the Philippines, who work in the construction, nursing and personal
care industries for less than the minimum wage. Taken together,
these provisions are aimed at forcing Israeli workers into low-wage
jobs.
The government has also refused to restore cost-of-living allowances
to compensate for inflation.
Last month, the budget proposals and falling wages led to strikes
by public service workers that affected garbage collection, kindergartens
and hospitals. The Histadrut trade union federation has threatened
to expand the industrial action to the state-owned trading enterprises.
Protestors from diverse social groups have held rallies and meetings
to oppose the budget.
But business and the capital markets are demanding that the
government implement the budget at once without any concessions.
Oded Tyrah, head of Israels Manufacturing Association, said
any delay in passing the budget would create chaos in the
economy, a financial crisis and a lowering of Israels credit
rating.
While cutting social insurance and welfare programmes, the
budget maintains the flow of funds to the Zionist settlements
and the ultra-Orthodox Israelis whose support is crucial for the
survival of a Likud-led government. The settlements are a hugely
divisive issue. A recent opinion poll showed that nearly four
out of five Israelis would dismantle most of them as part of a
peace deal with the Palestinians, and one in three wants this
to start immediately, both for political and economic reasons.
Yet the new budget allocated $270 million to the settlements.
In reality, the 200 settlementsillegal under international
law and little short of fortressesget all kinds of extra
cash: transfers, tax benefits and allocations for roads, transport,
house building and security. Most of these infusions of money
are anything but transparent.
According to an Israeli Interior Ministry audit cited in the
British Guardian newspaper, the settlements receive grants
up to four times greater than those given to Israels poorest
towns. In some cases, as at Megillot, a settlement in the northern
Dead Sea area, this years per capita subsidy was £2,000,
a 20 percent increase over last year, while Lod, one of Israels
poorest towns, received £211 per person.
Mossi Raz, a member of parliament from the left-wing Meretz
Party, said that while almost every other area of public expenditure
had been cut, the settlements were virtually immune. The
cuts almost didnt touch them, he said. On the
contrary, in many areas the amounts increased.
This massive disparity in funding, and the fact that these
subsidies are largely hidden from public scrutiny, have provoked
huge public anger. According to a recent poll, 63 percent of Israelis
believe that the amount spent on the settlements is unjustified.
The leader of the Meretz Party, Yossi Sarid, has described it
as the greatest social scandal in Israel.
But while the funding for settlements was the ostensible reason
for the Labour Party quitting the Likud-Labour coalition, other
considerations were involved in party leader Benyamin Ben-Eliezers
decision: internal Labour politics and the fear that he was losing
control of the party.
On November 19, Ben-Eliezer faces a leadership contest and,
according to opinion polls, he trails behind both former general
Amron Mitzna, mayor of Haifa, and Haim Ramon, a member of parliament.
Both were from the beginning opposed to Labours participation
in Sharons hard-line government. Ben-Eliezer, as defence
minister, is seen as virtually indistinguishable from Sharon,
and as such has little political credibility. Mitzna is in favour
of opening immediate and unconditional peace talks with the Palestinians.
Ben-Eliezer evidently calculated that the decision to quit
the coalition over the issues of the settlements and cuts in social
programs would boost his popularity in the party. At the same
time, it would torpedo any chance of Sharon leading a stable government,
paving the way for the even more hawkish former prime minister,
Benyamin Netanyahu, to succeed in a Likud Party leadership contest
against Sharon.
Since under Israels constitution the prime minister is
directly elected, each party holds a primary election to vote
for its leader before the general election. The victory of Netanyahu
over Sharon as Likud leader, Ben-Eliezer calculates, would generate
huge hostility and boost Labours chances in a general election
that must be held by next November.
Sharon tries to form a narrow right-wing coalition
Sharon is determined to hang on to power by working out a deal
with the small right-wing and nationalist parties, although success
is by no means assured. While elections must be held by November
of 2003, Sharon is anxious to postpone them for as long as possible.
He is doing his best to ensure that the US war on terrorism
widens to include Iran, Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon. In that
event, he believes, a US victory would bring key strategic advantages,
including the installation of regimes subservient to the US and
the disarming of Israels neighbours, thereby vindicating
his policies and assuring his own re-election.
The ultra-orthodox Shas party and the National Union-Yisrael
Beitenu bloc have said they will vote for the budget. But any
deal with them will necessarily entail further concessions to
the Zionist settlers, including an escalation in the war against
the Palestinians, and more social spending for their political
bases in two further votes on the budget that must be held before
the end of 2002.
The National Union-Yisrael Beitenu bloc, made up of Moledet,
successor to the settler and virulently anti-Palestinian Kach
movement, Tekuma and Beitenu Yisrael, has seven seats in the Knesset
(parliament). Its founder, Abraham Lieberman, was infrastructure
minister in the government, but pulled out in March in protest
over Sharons lifting of the siege of Yassir Arafats
compound in Ramallah.
He had resigned in October 2001 when Sharon pulled out of Hebron,
but rejoined the government after the assassination of the ultra-right-wing
zealot, Moledet leader Rehavam Zeevi. Lieberman was always
opposed to the Oslo Accords and any compromise with the Palestinians.
The ultra-nationalists reject a new US peace proposal that
aims to create an independent Palestinian state by the end of
2003. This faction is demanding ethnic cleansing: the so-called
transfer, i.e., expulsion, of Palestinians from the
West Bank and Gaza, and the annexation of the Occupied Territories.
Eliezer Cohen, another member of the National Union-Yisrael
Beitenu bloc, said his party would demand military operations
four or five times bigger than those launched by Sharon
thus far. Either they agree to our terms and we are in,
or there will elections around March or April, he said.
Thus, the price for Liebermans supporthe is an
ally of Netanyahu and in favour of early electionsis an
ever more aggressive stance against the Palestinians that must
derail any prospect of peace, and a corresponding increase in
social and political domestic strife. At best, such an alliance
would give Sharon a very slim majority of two or three votes in
the Knesset.
Even more importantly, these small parties, upon whom the survival
of governments depend given Israels system of proportional
representation and its bitterly divided political scene, would
be able to hold the Sharon government to ransom, precipitating
an election on issues of their own choosing. Indeed, Sharons
predecessors, Labour Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Likud Prime
Minister Benyamin Netanyahu, were forced to resign when their
fragile coalitions fell apart.
Sharon has already appointed former armed forces chief of staff
Shaul Mofaz as minister of defence to replace Ben-Eliezer. It
was under Mofazs hard-line leadership that the army adopted
the policy of targeted assassinations of Palestinian militants
and leaders. He has advocated exiling Palestinian leader Yassir
Arafat. Earlier in the year, he accused the Palestinian leadership
of being infected from head to toe with terror.
Sharon has also invited his arch rival within the Likud Party,
Netanyahu, to join his government as foreign affairs minister.
Netanyahu, unenthusiastic about supporting Sharon and jeopardising
his own chances of becoming premier again, but reluctant to be
seen as torpedoing a Likud government in crisis, said he would
accept the offer, but made his acceptance conditional upon Sharon
calling an early election, a condition that Sharon has rejected.
Any new coalition that Sharon can put together without his
former Labour partners will therefore be based on an extreme and
very narrow right-wing layer. It will strip Sharon of his thin
veil of respectability abroad and social inclusiveness
at home. Whether the elections take place early in the New Year
or next autumn, as Sharon would prefer, the USs tentative
plans to restart negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians
have, in effect, been derailed. In any event, they were largely
meant to be a side show, providing some cover for Arab regimes
supporting a US war against Iraq.
The collapse of Sharons coalition took the Bush administration
by surprise. Ari Fleischer, the White House spokesman, had nothing
to say. The United States views the events in Israel as
part of Israels internal democratic process, and we have
no comment beyond that, he told the US media.
The Labour Partys role
Irrespective of Ben-Eliezers subjective reasons for organising
the walkout from the cabinet, the fact that he left Sharons
government and chose to do so on social questions is significant.
It points to the enormous sharpening of class tensions within
Israel.
As coalition partners with Likud, the Labour leaders sought
to stifle opposition to the governments policy. They claimed
to be exerting a moderating influence on the Sharon government
by arguing against the expansion of the settlements in the West
Bank and Gaza, which nevertheless continued to expand and which,
under Ben-Eliezers command, the army defended.
Until recently, the Labour leaders insisted that security,
a euphemism for war against the Palestinians, demanded economic
sacrifice on the part of the working class. That position has
become less and less tenable as unemployment, inflation and social
cuts have continued to mount.
At the same time, Sharons military adventures have failed
to produce the promised ends of peace and security. Rather, they
have led to the loss of hundreds of Israeli lives, particularly
among young people. The brutal subjugation of the Palestinians
has prompted hundreds of senior army reservists to refuse to serve
in the Occupied Territories.
On November 2, the largest ever peace demonstrations took place.
More than 100,000 people attended rallies in Rabin Square, Tel
Aviv, and Jerusalem to mark the seventh anniversary of the assassination
of Yitzhak Rabin, who was killed by an ultra-nationalist opposed
to any compromise with the Palestinians.
The Labour leaders are organically incapable of leading a serious
struggle against Sharon and the right-wing nationalists, with
whom they have only tactical differences. But the conditions are
now emerging to re-orientate the Israeli working class on a new
perspective opposed to Zionist nationalism: one that sets out
to unite Israeli and Palestinian workers and youth on an anti-imperialist
and socialist basis.
See Also:
Washington leaves open Israeli
involvement in war against Iraq
[25 October 2002]
Israel: Clashes between settlers
and soldiers destabilise Sharons coalition
[22 October 2002]
Israel: Public sector strike
and protests against austerity budget
[17 October 2002]
Sharon pledges more to come
after Israeli military kills 14 in Gaza Strip
[9 October 2002]
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