Here's a simple way to understand the situation.
The far right -parties and the moderate left -parties are each likely to get roughly the same number of seats that they received in the 1999 election. The difference is that in 1999 the rightist parties divided their vote among three parties and today have largely united into one. The moderate left in 1999 gave their votes mainly to one party and now are dividing it among four.
Rubin discusses some of the themes pushed by those running against Netanyahu -- and why they won't work:
- Bibi is for the rich.
- Bibi will get you killed.
- Bibi doesn’t want your vote.
- Livni’s ad
- The choice of photograph by former Prime Minister Tsipi Livni
Netanyahu is expected to win, handily
The response from the international stage is to interpret Netanyahu's victory as the death knell for the two-state solution peace process.
To this convenient interpretation, Rubin responds:
Yet Netanyahu’s impending victory has nothing to do with any shift on that issue. Rather, it is due to the fact that the prime minister has done a reasonably good job, the economy is okay, terrorism is low, he’s kept out of trouble, and has shown he can be trusted to preserve security. Moreover, there is no very attractive figure, unity, or single impressive party on the other side. Given this situation, Netanyahu’s victory--meaning his party will come in first and he will form the next government--is a no-brainer.Read the whole thing.
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1 comment:
The left in the US will say that anything short of electing the PLO to run Israel is course hyper hyper ultra mega extreme right wing extremist Jews attempting to conquer the planet.
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