Danon’s power in Likud cental committee likely to increase

By LAHAV HARKOV, JPOST

DanonThis week’s convention to vote on letting deputy defense minister call meetings on ‘ideological matters’ several times this year. Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon voting at the Likud elections, June 30, 2013.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon could receive key powers as head of the Likud central committee Wednesday, including calling votes on matters of diplomacy and security, if votes go his way at the party’s convention.

Likud released the agenda for its convention on Saturday night, two days after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu agreed to make concessions to Danon, who has turned into his most active adversary in the party, even taking the prime minister to the Supreme Court over the central committee’s power.

Netanyahu’s cooperation with Danon marked his second gesture to the Right within Likud in one day, as he also announced support for a bill by coalition chairman Yariv Levin (Likud Beytenu) to have a Basic Law declaring Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people.

Both came shortly after the breakdown in talks with the Palestinians, which brought criticism from some to the Right in Likud, especially Danon.

On Wednesday, the committee is set to vote to allow Danon to call the central committee two to three times a year to vote on “ideological matters,” such as security, diplomacy and economics.

As such, Danon plans to call a meeting on diplomatic matters within 60 days and socioeconomic issues within 120, as well as a meeting on ways to strengthen the party and its institutions.

Another meeting will determine the way the party’s list for the Knesset is chosen.

Currently, the procedure is an open primary for all of the party’s members, but many central committee members would prefer to revert to the vote being limited only to them.

Sources close to Netanyahu said the matter is still under review in the party’s court.

In addition, the central committee will vote on whether to allow itself to change the Likud constitution by a simple majority vote. However, this will not apply if the party wants to unite with another party.

On Thursday, the central committee plans to vote on changes to the party’s constitution, including requiring the committee to be called at least once every six months.

Gil Hoffman contributed to this report.

May 4, 2014 | 1 Comment »

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  1. Danon’s power within the Likud central leadership, now openly acknowledged and formalized by Netanyahu, partly explains and as well as sets the course toward the long-awaited and now recently announced policy shift toward Jewish nationalism.

    If all this can be thus accepted as permanent policy, then the State of Israel shall indeed be regarded as the state of the Jewish nation, and that no actions shall ever be permitted that will put the destiny of the Jewish nation under control of a bi-national state.

    However, Netanyahu has flip-flopped on too many related issues for anybody to belive his promises without actions on the ground to back them up.

    One of his latest promises is that the Jewish nation sall have the inalienabl;e right to settle Eretz-Yisrael.

    We await action to back up that pledge

    Arnold Harris
    Mount Horeb WI