Ya´alon: Kadima joining gov´t may alienate public (JERUSALEM POST) By JPOST COM STAFF 05/12/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=269644
JERUSALEM POST
JERUSALEM POST Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
Vice Premier Moshe Ya´alon said Saturday that while Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu was correct to avoid early elections, the process
by which Kadima joined the government coalition could potentially
alienate the public and cause them to lose faith in the political
system.
Speaking at a cultural event in Nes Ziona, Ya´alon said that the
formation of the 94-member national unity coalition is the type of
political maneuver that "surely does not encourage the public to be
involved in politics, or even come to vote."
In an apparent jab at Kadima leader Shaul Mofaz for joining the
coalition after having been extremely critical of Netanyahu while a
member of the opposition, Ya´alon said that the public was becoming
disillusioned and losing trust in politicians because of
their "zigzagging" and failure to keep their word.
Ya´alon added, however, that the broad-based coalition has the
opportunity to address two of the central challenges facing the
nation, implementing an alternative to the Tal Law and changing the
electoral system.
It would be impossible to make these changes with a narrow coalition
that relies on small factions, Ya´alon said. "There is an opportunity
here and it is our obligation to prove ourselves," he added.
Kadima MK Orit Zuaretz on Saturday equated the coalition deal which
saw the party become a part of the ruling government with human
trafficking.
"I just came back from an international conference where I
represented Israel´s struggle against the trafficking against women,"
Zuaretz wrote on her Facebook page, "and in the meanwhile, there
seems to be human trafficking going on here all the while, in front
of the public eye."
"Twenty-eight MKs and 90,000 Kadima members were auctioned to
Netanyahu," Zuaretz said.
Zuaretz joins a growing number of Kadima MKs who have voiced
opposition to the deal since it was inked. Five MKs have said already
that they want to break off from the party, though the legal
requirement to split is seven MKs. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post
05/12/12)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY