
Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu Likud Gov’t Unmasked
Senior Likud Knesset Member Silvan Shalom hosted a Purim party Sunday night and called on unity despite his apparently being skipped over to return to his former post as Foreign Minister.
Purim, the holiday when Jews all over the world wear masks and costumes, begins Monday night, but the masks already are coming off the emerging Cabinet. MK Shalom told his supporters he is more interested in maintaining Likud ideology than he is in having an important Cabinet post. Dan Meridor, whom Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu recruited to run in the new Knesset and even included in top-level meetings before the election, is less placid. He is known to have wanted the Justice Ministry and adamantly opposes current Justice Minister Daniel Friedmann’s policies.
However, Israel Is Our Home (Yisrael Beiteinu) chairman MK Avigdor Lieberman apparently has won his demand that Friedmann continue as Justice Minister. He was chosen from outside the political establishment by outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and has aimed to curtail wider and self-empowered authority by the High Court.
MK Meridor is important to Likud chairman Netanyahu because of his dovish outlook which offsets the Likud's nationalist image that has worried Western nations. One of his views that contradicts the Likud platform is his readiness to negotiate with Syria over the strategic Golan Heights.
It is widely assumed that former IDF Chief of Staff Moshe Ya’alon will become the Defense Minister and that MK Lieberman will become the Foreign Minister. One question mark is the Finance Ministry, which may be held by Netanyahu along with his being Prime Minister, or it might be offered to MK Shalom. It is seen as the toughest Cabinet post because of the recession, demands for more government outlays and a bulging deficit resulting from lower tax revenues.
MK Gideon Sa'ar, who was head of the Likud caucus in the last Knesset, is believed to be headed for the Education Ministry. A scheduled Likud party vote on Monday for his successor as caucus chairman was delayed by Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu because of MK Ofer Akunis’s running for the post. Netanyahu’s nominee is Zev Elkin, who deserted Kadima, and the Prime Minister-designate is scheduled to speak with MK Elkin before a vote takes place.
Former Education Minister Limor Livnat is the frontrunner to head the Communications Ministry, leaving several Likud Cabinet hopefuls with less important posts or none at all. Livnat served as Communications minister for three years from 1996. Waiting in the wings are MKs Benny Begin, Yisrael Katz, Michael Eitan, Yaakov Erdan, Dr. Yuval Steinitz and Yossi Peled.
Several of the MKs want a Cabinet post so badly that they are suggesting a rotation of ministers.
One position that is certain is that of Speaker of the Knesset. Veteran Likud MK Reuven Rivlin was unanimously elected to the post on Monday. The Knesset also named him as the temporary head of the Finance Committee until permanent members and chairs are chosen. MK Tzachi HaNegbi, past chairman of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, will remain in the post temporarily.
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