Sunday, March 08, 2009

Unrest in Likud As Gov't Forms


Hillel Fendel Unrest in Likud As Gov't Forms

Senior members in the Likud who had hoped to be senior ministers in the next government are quietly steaming at the number and importance of the portfolios granted to Avigdor Lieberman and his Yisrael Beiteinu party.As reported here on Friday, Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu has agreed to all of Lieberman’s demands. Netanyahu will appoint Lieberman as Foreign Minister, retain non-politician Daniel Friedmann as Justice Minister, and will give Lieberman's party the Infrastructures and Tourism Ministries as well. The Ministry of Public Security is also apparently headed to Yisrael Beiteinu, though this is not final.



Netanyahu’s cave-in leaves only relatively minor portfolios for the Likud. Newcomer-to-politics Moshe Yaalon, a former IDF Chief of Staff, will apparently be named Defense Minister, but Silvan Shalom, who had hoped to return to the post of Foreign Minister, and Gideon Saar, who had his eye on the Justice Ministry, will have to settle for more minor posts.

Shalom plans to host a gathering of some 200 of his supporters Sunday evening, but the show of strength is not expected to change Netanyahu’s mind. Shalom was once Netanyahu’s major challenger for Likud party leadership, but his strength has waned in recent years.

Sentiment within the Likud is that Netanyahu caved in much too easily to Lieberman’s demands, at the expense of the Likud. The Likud ministerial-hopefuls are not making their complaints public, for fear of losing the chance to receive any portfolio, but not-for-attribution quotes against Netanyahu’s coalition negotiations abound.

Other Parties

Coalition talks with the other three potential and likely government partner parties continue. Shas, with its 11 MKs – compared to Yisrael Beiteinu’s 15 – is expected to receive three ministerial portfolios, while National Union and Jewish Home are hoping for one each.

The 3-seat Jewish Home, headed by Rabbi Prof. Daniel Hershkowitz, has not made its demands public, and in fact is expected to take whatever it is offered.

National Union Wants to Build

The National Union, on the other hand, is demanding the Housing and Construction Ministry for party leader Yaakov Katz (Ketzaleh). Katz served as a top aide in the early 90’s to then-Housing Minister Ariel Sharon, during which time the Jewish population in Judea and Samaria greatly increased. The National Union, which has 4 Knesset Members, is facing competition from Shas, which also wants the Housing Ministry.

Labor is Out

The apparent appointments of Lieberman as Foreign Minister and Friedmann as Justice Minister have finalized Ehud Barak's decision not to join the coalition, with or without his Labor Party. Barak acknowledged as much when he publicly blamed his party colleagues over the weekend for stubbornly insisting on not talking with Netanyahu, thus paving the way for a "narrow right-wing government [instead o a broad national unity government."

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