Sunday, June 22, 2008

Olmert Will Fire Labor if It Votes Against Gov't


Hillel Fendel


Labor MK Cabel: "At least in Shas, where one man - Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef - makes the decisions, he has the fear of Heaven upon him, but in Kadima, Olmert runs a dictatorship without even that."
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert informed the Cabinet ministers of the Labor Party that he intends to fire them if they vote on Wednesday to dissolve the Knesset and bring about new elections.

Labor's ministers had decided just an hour earlier, at a meeting with party leader Defense Minister Ehud Barak, to vote to dissolve the Knesset. Barak himself cannot participate in the vote on Wednesday, as he is not a Knesset Member.. Barak told them that voting to topple the government is a "matter of values," given the series of police investigations against Prime Minister Olmert. The final straw was the testimony last month by Moshe Talansky of New York, in which he said he had given hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to Olmert over the course of several years.

However, when the Labor ministers received notes from Olmert stating that he intends to fire them, the Labor ministers quickly left the Cabinet meeting to consult once again with Barak about their next steps. Such a development would leave them out of the government during the crucial months preceding new elections.

Second Thoughts in Labor
Education Minister Yuli Tamir of Labor says that her party must "stop waving around threats" to topple the government. "If we want to leave the government," she said, "we must convene our Central Committee and make a clear decision. If not, we should allow Kadima to conduct its primaries." Barak originally demanded that Kadima replace Olmert at the helm, but implied that it must be done quickly.

An internal Kadima committee recommended last week that the party hold primaries - but these are not likely to be held before two months from now. Olmert has implied that he would not run again for party leader, and the main battle is expected to be between Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz. Livni has been rumored to be considering quitting the party and possibly starting a new one if she loses.

Cabel and Shas
MK Eitan Cabel, Labor's Secretary-General, said that Labor will vote to topple the government - but also appeared to leave the door open for a last-minute change. "This is a matter of principle," Cabel said. "If we have no choice, we will go to new elections. There are times when a leader must make a decision even if it hurts him."

Cabel also gave Shas - the Sephardic hareidi-religious coalition member party - a back-handed compliment, at the expense of Kadima: "At least in Shas, where one man - Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef - makes the decisions, he has the fear of Heaven upon him, but in Kadima, Olmert runs a dictatorship without even that.".

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