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Israel: Sharons victory presages internal strife amidst
escalating aggression
By Ann Talbot
31 January 2003
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Ariel Sharon became the first prime minister in recent history
to win a consecutive term in office on January 28 when his Likud
Party won the Israeli general election.
Nationally, Likud took 37 seats in the Knesset, compared to
the 19 that it held previously. Labour fell from 26 seats to 19,
while Shinui, a relatively new party, increased its share of seats
from 6 to 15. The right-wing Shas Party fell from 17 to 11 seats
and Meeretz, which emerged from the peace movement, won 6 seats,
compared to 10 at the previous election.
With a US-led attack imminent against Iraq, Sharon will undoubtedly
seek to use his victory to escalate his military suppression of
the Palestinians under the guise of the war against terror.
Sections of the American press implicitly endorsed this policy,
hailing the result as a sign that Israeli voters endorse
tough tactics ( Washington Post).
In reality, Sharon owes his victory not to any mass enthusiasm
for his policies, but rather to the lack of any alternative political
perspective on offer. Almost a third of the electorate stayed
away from the polling stations. In what was the lowest ever turnout
in an Israeli general election, only 68.5 percent of the countrys
3.2 million voters cast ballotsa sharp drop from the 1999
general election, when turnout was 78.9 percent. In 1996, turnout
was 79.3 percent.
Only about one sixth of the total electorate actually voted
for Likud. This accounts for the apparent paradox between Sharons
electoral victory and opinion polls, which showed majority support
for an Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories and a
negotiated settlement with the Palestinians.
Shass decline further underscores that the election results
do not reflect a general rightward shift in the electorate, but
rather a profound alienation from official politics.
Labours vote collapsed to such an extent that, even in
its traditional stronghold of Haifa, where Labour leader Amram
Mitzna is mayor, the partys vote fell, enabling Likud to
gain the seat. For most of the previous two years, Labours
Shimon Peres and Ben Eliezer had collaborated as coalition partners
in the Likud-dominated government. While Sharon launched savage
attacks on the civilian population of the occupied territories,
Labour covered his back by maintaining the pretence that the government
was still interested in pursuing negotiations.
Despite its political survival hanging in the balance, Labour
continued to offer no real opposition to Sharon throughout the
election. Even Labour politicians on the campaign trail were heard
referring to him affectionately by his nickname Arik.
Labour made no serious attempt to raise the question of the
economy, enabling the Likud leader to make speech after speech
in which he never discussed his governments dismal economic
record. Israels economy has shrunk by 1 percent in each
of the two years that Sharon has been in office. This is a startling
collapse from the 7.4 percent rate of growth Israel experienced
in 2000.
Even these figures understate the situation, according to Nadine
Baudot-Trajtenberg, an economist with the Bank Hapoalim, who points
out that because the population has grown during this period the
gross domestic product per person has fallen by 3 percent in both
years. As a result, she estimates that Israel is suffering the
worst recession that any industrialised country has seen since
World War II.
Nor did Labour raise recent corruption allegations against
Sharon. This issue was effectively suppressed by mutual consent
for the duration of the campaign.
The Shinui Party was able to capitalize on political disaffection
despite having no distinct programme on either the economy or
the Palestinian question. Shinui, which means change,
identifies itself as a secular party by attacking the subsidies
paid to religious fundamentalist groups. Its lack of principled
differences with Sharon were made clear immediately the results
were announced, when its leader, Yosef Tommy Lapid,
a former talk show host, appealed to Labour to retract its commitment
not to join a unity government with Sharon.
Lapid assured Sharon of Shinuis support. I say
to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, whom I congratulate: Sir, establish
a secular unity government and we will serve in it faithfully.
He went on to urge Labour to depose its leader Amram Mitzna if
he continued refusing to join a coalition.
In the immediate aftermath of his partys devastating
defeat, Mitzna reiterated his intention of remaining out of a
coalition, noting that Sharons hope was that the Labour
Party will once more serve as a fig leaf for his failing policy.
However, there is every chance that within a short space of time
Labour could be back in government with Likud, with or without
Mitzna.
In his victory speech Sharon said, It is time to come
together, and continued, I am announcing today, that
after the president assigns me the task of forming a government,
I will ask all Zionist parties to join a unity government that
will be as broad as possible.
His reference to the Zionist parties was especially
directed at Labour. Since the foundation of the state of Israel,
Labour has been central to the Zionist project, giving a democratic
and even socialist colouration to what was always a fundamentally
reactionary programme.
Labours electoral collapse is part of the wider crisis
of the Israeli state, which finds itself at an historic impasse.
It is no longer possible to reconcile Zionism, which is based
on religious exclusivism and the forcible oppression of the Palestinians,
with the maintenance of bourgeois democratic forms of rule.
If Likud has been able to seize the initiative it is because
the violent, racist, anti-Arab policies that it has pursued since
it emerged as a faction within Zionism most consistently and ruthlessly
express the logic and requirements of Zionist rule today. Labour
has been drawn into Likuds orbit because it shares its commitment
to Zionism. Insofar as it has identified itself with the Oslo
Agreement and the peace process, it has done so with
the perspective of creating a Palestinian mini-state that would
be completely subordinate to Israel. Meeretz and Shinui support
the same two-state perspective.
If Sharon declares that the country faces a national emergency
because of continued suicide bombings or because the US has launched
a war against Iraq, these parties will fall into line, whether
they are inside or outside the government coalition.
Sharon has already made clear that his government intends to
establish more settlements on occupied land in the West Bank.
In his victory speech he declared that he would immediately free
funds from the budget to increase immigration to Israel
from all of the Jewish diaspora.
The Likud government and the religious extremists have consciously
cultivated the settlers as shock troops in their bid to incorporate
the occupied territories into Israel. By pressing ahead with the
settlements, Sharon is attempting to create a greater Israel in
which the Palestinians will be either driven into exile or subjected
to an apartheid-style regime.
Sharon hopes to win Labours support to consolidate his
new government and has threatened to call new elections if it
does not agree, with the aim of forcing a leadership challenge
in the party to oust Mitzna. The Likud leader does not want a
coalition with the right-wing extremist parties, for fear it will
antagonize Israels Arab neighbours and upset US efforts
to get the backing of the Middle East regimes for its war against
Iraq. Israel is more economically dependent on America than ever
because of its economic crisis, and is relying on 1,000 US troops
to defend it against a possible Iraqi missile attack.
In the aftermath of a US takeover of Iraq, Israeli strategists
reckon that they will have a freer hand to deal with the Palestinians
and carry through the ethnic cleansing of the occupied territories.
This is a deranged perspective that could only be considered by
a political class that has no policy to address the mounting social
contradictions internally or establish stabile relations with
neighbouring states. It is the perspective of a criminal clique
that is leading the Israeli population and the masses of the Middle
East towards a catastrophe.
See Also:
Israeli elections highlight disaster
facing Middle East
[28 January 2003]
Israel: Corruption
scandal grips ruling Likud
[31 December 2002]
Israel: An attempt
to resuscitate the Labour Party
[9 December 2002]
Israel: social crisis
underlies collapse of Likud-Labour coalition
[5 November 2002]
Chronology of a pogrom:
How Sharon, US prepared assault on Palestinians
[4 April 2002]
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