Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Labor MK Quits Knesset


Hillel Fendel

Danny Yatom is the second Labor MK to resign from the Knesset in the past five weeks. Yatom announced his resignation at a party faction meeting in the Knesset on Monday afternoon. The reason? He no longer wants to be part of what he calls the "deteriorating political culture."

At the end of May, MK Ephraim Sneh resigned from the Knesset, citing his dissatisfaction with the way Labor has been run of late. Sneh has started a new party, called Yisrael Chazakah, Strong Israel.Yatom will be replaced in the Knesset by Leon Letinsky, a former member of the One Nation party headed by former Defense Minister and ex-Histadrut Labor Union Chief Amir Peretz.

Yatom, who has already submitted his resignation letter to the Knesset secretariat, said he is quitting politics because of what he called Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's "ethical failures." He threatened last week to leave the legislature if Labor were to agree to continue in the coalition - which it did.

Outgoing-MK Yatom said the government has turned the concept of "personal survival" into an objective. "I feel that I am part of this deteriorating political culture every time I vote in favor of the government," he said.

Yatom, 63 and father of five, served in the IDF as O.C. Central Command, and was Military Secretary to the Prime and Defense Ministers. This was his second term as MK - thus that he resigned before meriting the pension and other benefits due to two-term MKs.

Yatom's brother Ehud Yatom, a former GSS Deputy Chief, was a Knesset Member with the Likud from 2003-2006. He was among those who objected to the Disengagement from Gush Katif and northern Shomron.

Kadima to Determine Primaries
In other political news, the Kadima party has ratified the agreement it signed with Labor last week, according to which it will hold primaries for party leader in September. Labor agreed, in turn, not to work to topple the government.

Ehud Olmert, whose replacement is the reason why Labor demanded primaries, has not yet said whether he will run in the primaries. He has said that after his lawyers cross-examine Moshe Talansky - the American philanthropist who testified that he gave hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to Olmert - the public pressure to replace him will diminish.

Olmert left today's Kadima meeting before the primaries were discussed..

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