Sunday, February 15, 2009

Kadima Headed for Opposition


Hillel Fendel Kadima Headed for Opposition

The newly-elected Kadima Knesset faction, convening for the first time, is leaning towards sitting in the opposition and “leaving” Netanyahu with a nationalist government. Many outgoing government ministers in the party plan to recommend to party leader Tzipi Livni to refuse to enter any government headed by Binyamin Netanyahu. Among them is Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who told her that a stint in the opposition will help her win the next elections. Livni apparently agrees.

Possibly along the same lines, Olmert hinted broadly before Sunday morning’s Cabinet meeting that he plans to meet with Netanyahu and discuss with him the deal in the works for the release of 1,000 terrorists in exchange for kidnapped-in-Gaza soldier Gilad Shalit. “We must recognize the new political situation that has developed,” Olmert said, acknowledging that the left-center camp lost the elections to the nationalist camp. “Until last week, this government operated with a stable parliamentary majority, but the situation has now changed, and we will function accordingly.”

Sheetrit Against Likud

Another Kadima minister outspokenly in favor of heading for the opposition is Meir Sheetrit, a former Likud member. “Let the country have a right-wing government,” he has been widely quoted as saying, “which will likely fall in a year and a half, and then the country will never vote right-wing again.”

Another former Likud member, Minister Tzachi HaNegbi, does not retain such animosity for his old party. He is calling for a national unity government between Likud and Kadima, without specifying who must head it. “Livni and Netanyahu must sit together,” he said on Saturday night. “Without a unity government, Israel will be in big trouble.”

Minister Avi Dichter said on Sunday morning, “Kadima will not join a government that is not headed by Tzipi Livni.” He then qualified his statement by saying that the minimum he would accept would be a rotation agreement between her and Netanyahu.

Livni: I Will be the Head - Either of the Gov't or the Opposition

Livni herself is said to have accepted Olmert’s recommendation, suggested to her in a private meeting between the two last week, to head the opposition. “I will either be Prime Minister or head of the opposition,” she has reportedly said in private conversation.

Outgoing Knesset Speaker Dalia Itzik, a former Labor member who joined Kadima within weeks of its founding in late 2005, is another pro-opposition voice.

Likud Wants Kadima

The Likud is anxious to have Kadima join its nationalist-government-in-formation. “We call on Livni to put aside petty politics and display national responsibility,” Likud sources said on Saturday night. “She must understand that the nation has chosen Netanyahu, and she must therefore join a national unity government headed by Netanyahu.”

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