Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Unmasking the protesters' true character

Israel Hayom

The protesters who have dominated the country for the past month have now produced their own panel of experts, whom they hope will advance their cause for middle class social justice.

The government should welcome this alternative to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Trajtenberg Committee, which has been tasked with suggesting economic reforms (let me once again just say, the leaders of the protest do face important opposition from within, but it has been silenced). This newly-created panel serves the government by unmasking the protesters' true character. The protests have clearly had the makings of a political advocacy group from their outset; its political nature was re-enforced as it sprawled to more and broader sectors of society, with each bringing to the table different (and sometimes opposing) political views. For the government, this has served as an antidote to the attacks it sustained from the Left when the protest first erupted. Now that this alternative panel has been created, the protest is back to square one. Chairman of the National Union of Israeli Students and protest leader Itzik Shmuli can recite the all-inclusive mantra of "not Right and not Left" until his face turns blue, but the over-arching political slant of his panel members has not gone unnoticed: they are from the Van Leer Institute and the Israel Democracy Institute [both considered by some as liberal think tanks]; most members have ties to the New Israel Fund [a U.S.-based left wing political advocacy group headed by former Meretz MK Naomi Hazan] through its affiliated organizations such as Shatil and other supported NGOs such as Adalah, Musawa, The Abraham Fund, Physicians for Human Rights, and so forth. These are unabashedly left-wing groups; their agenda is at odds with that of the current government; a significant number of them want to do away with an Israel that is a Jewish democracy, an oxymoron as far as they are concerned. If they had their way, Israel would be without any ethnic identity and the Law of the Return would be repealed. You cannot divorce the political and philosophical world view of these protesters from their socioeconomic agenda. Professor Yossi Yonah and Dr. Hala Espanioly fall into this category (the former also chaired the education committee of the Higher Arab Monitoring Committee which is designed to coordinate activities of Arab-Israeli organizations and defend Arab interests in Israel). Other names were also mentioned in earlier stages of the protest, including those who are on the extreme side and have clear anti-Israeli views. They are on the communist end of the Israeli left, somewhere in between Hadash and Balad (communist and Arab parties, respectively). It is no coincidence that they have been talking about highlighting key differences on hot-button issues and are singularly focused on "changing the system." This term is straight out of old-school revolutionary playbooks; a plan to change the economic system will forever belie a desire to transform the system of government.

And indeed, the media will try to portray the alternative committee as a valid way to balance out the Trajtenberg Committee. A longtime Zionist on the Left told me yesterday that this can perhaps underscore the tragic turn of events the Zionist Left has experienced; it kowtows to gurus of the radical Left and puts them at the forefront of its ideological struggle. Their views are striking considering the fact that Trajtenberg is not your typical neo-liberal ideologue. When all is said and done, we are going to be presented with the bill for the proposed plans; their success or failure will hinge on the sources of the funding for the economic reforms. Having said that, by all means let the alternative panel pitch their proposals to Netanyahu's committee. Unlike what has been depicted in the Israeli media's very lopsided coverage in favor of the protesters -- the Aristotelian golden path for the Israeli economy in the next few years lies in a vibrancy that the healthy clash of these two world views will generate.

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