By Ted Belman
Haaretz asks how it is that both both the Bibi Camp and the anti-Bibi camp received 49.5 % of the vote, each, yet the Bibi Camp got 65 seats. They go on to blame the Labour leader for not running with Meretz. Meretz went on to garner only 3% of the vote and such votes ended up in the ash-can of failed votes. These votes if part of a joint run should have increased the Anti-Bibi Camps total of seats by 3 or 4.
Similarly the Arab Party, Balad, broke away from the Joint List, and failed to reach the threshold. Thus their votes suffered the same fate as those of Meretz.
A third factor is that Shaked also stayed in the race to siphon off Anti-Bibi votes from the others in the Anti-Bibi Camp, thereby helping to ensure the failure of Meretz.
Thus , in the end, these wasted votes ensured Bibi of his blow out victory.
During the last week of the campaign, Shaked insisted on a “broad” Government.. This was incomprehensible for someone allegedly committed to the right.
In hindsight, it is now obvious, she was being strategic. She was chasing away the right wing voters and hoping to attract centrists from the center/left.
@Ted
https://www.haaretz.com/2012-03-01/ty-article/former-judge-backs-arab-judge-over-israeli-anthem-scandal/0000017f-db11-d4e1-a57f-fbd53ee50000
@Ted
https://www.adalah.org/en/law/view/530
I wasn’t aware of any of that.
Thanks.
So we don’t need a new law, just the enforcement of the existing law.
@Ted Basic Law says anti-Zionist candidates and parties can’t run, right? But the Central Elections Committee has been letting them. I read that this guy won’t stand for Hatikvah because he feels it doesn’t apply to him:
https://forum-network.org/speakers/justine-salim-joubran/
https://forum-network.org/speakers/justine-salim-joubran/
“autonomous and self-contained” That means they pick each other like the Supreme Court does?
This is a problem. What is to be done?
At the beginning of this conversation, I said:
The problem is that Bennett changed everything by achieving his majority by including Ra’am. So no longer is it enough for the right to dominate the Jewish left, now it has to dominate the Jewish left plus the Arabs.
If the Arabs get their act together and get a voter turnout % equal to that of the Jews, we are screwed.
It is imperative that the new government do what is necessary to prevent such an occurrence.
@Peloni
https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/362243
What Bibi did was maximize the potential vote tally for the Right without Shaked while the Left failed to do the same resulting in a mismatched effort to conserve votes. If they had done so, having more parties, it would, or at least could, have resulted in them winning the election. In a strait-up popular vote, the Arab-Left would still have lost, but only by a margin of ~30K votes. Yet, recall that Shaked’s votes are included in the count for the Right, and her votes might not have voted for any other party on the Right, ie these could have been voters of the Left in some measure, and she had ~57K votes, making the outcome of a head to head vote into a real nail biter.
I am simply flabbergasted that the Right does not command a greater level of support than this. The Right had a great many advantages in this campaign which should have galvanized their support – the Lebanon gas theft, the wellspring of Arab violence, Gantz’ flooding Samaria with Arab illegal settlements etc.
@Ted
Shockingly, the claim made by Haaretz was correct.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/netanyahu-won-8-seat-majority-over-his-opponents-despite-near-parity-in-raw-votes/
So the Right garnered only 2,360,757 / (2,360,757 + 2,330,464) = 50.32% of the vote, and this assumes that Shaked’s ~57K votes were Right wing voters, which is clearly in some doubt.
The Left garnered 2,330,464 / (2,360,757 + 2,330,464) = 49.68% of the vote, and this includes the numbers from the failed Meretz and Balad party’s.
Consequently, the Haaretz claims are confirmed. This was a strategic victory only which was won on Bibi’s ability to unify the Right, sans Shaked, while the Arab-Left wasted nearly what could have amounted to as many as 7 mandates. Having won exactly 50.3% of the vote and by a margin of only 0.64%, Bibi gained 53.3% of the mandates and has an advantage of an 8 mandate lead over the Arab-Left. As pleasing as this victory stands, the margins could just as easily been bent the other way leaving the Arab-Left in control of the nation. This is a very disturbing reality.
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/elections/2022-11-03/ty-article/.premium/labor-leader-michaeli-blasts-lapid-he-wanted-to-erase-us/00000184-3ed4-d9a1-a5b5-3fdf7e6f0000
Israel Elections | Lapid’s Hara-kiri Paved the Way for Netanyahu’s Return
In the run-up to the Israeli elections, the Yesh Atid leader could have lowered the electoral threshold – thus saving Meretz from extinction – but rejected the proposal…
The multitude of party slates, the paucity of vote surplus agreements, the refusal to join ranks, the internecine quarrels, the arrogance, the unwarranted euphoria, the megalomania, the lack of recognition for the leader of the bloc – all of these were there from the very start. The conduct of the coalition of change in this campaign was like the Peres government’s handling of the 1996 election campaign (when he faced the political neophyte Netanyahu). A chronicle of a hara-kiri foretold…
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/elections/2022-11-03/ty-article/.highlight/lapids-hara-kiri-paved-the-way-for-netanyahus-return/00000184-3a40-d46d-ab96-bafbe4350000
@Ted Does it really matter? The popular vote doesn’t matter in US presidential elections either, only the electoral vote. If it mattered, politicians would employ different strategies. The American left tried to use that argument when Trump won and called for abolishing the electoral college. Glad to see they are not doing that in Israel.
I don’t know where Haaretz got the info that both Camps got 49.5% of the vote. If true then this election wasn’t a blow out. The victory of the Bibi camp had to do with not wasting any of their votes whereas the anti Bibi camp wasted many votes.
But maybe I am speaking too quickly. If we delete the Arab vote from the anti Bibi Camp then that leaves the anti-Bibi Camp with about 40% compared to 49.5%. That’s more like a mini blowout.
I am waiting to read an official announcement about what percentage of the total votes went to the Bibi Camp.
It is now being reported on JPOST that Shaked’s decision to run was coordinated with Likud per MK Yoav Kish who claims that Shaked wasn’t promised anything in return but forgiveness for doing so.
Likud and Shaked each dismissed this claim, but Shaked goes on to state
Following Kish’s statement to JPOST, Likud ordered its members to stop giving interviews.