Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Union of Right-Wing Parties

Israeli electoral alliance From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The Union of Right-wing Parties (Hebrew: איחוד מפלגות הימין, Ihud Miflagot HaYamin) was a short-lived electoral alliance of right-wing to far-right religious Zionist parties which included HaBayit HaYehudi, Otzma Yehudit, and Tkuma. The list was created ahead of the April 2019 Israeli legislative election[2] after Benjamin Netanyahu, urged The Jewish Home to accept Otzma Yehudit and Tkuma as part of its list for the April election, to avoid loss of votes by the right-wing bloc and International Criminal Court arrest warrants for Israeli officials.[3][4][5][6][7][8] The alliance gained five seats in the April election.[9]

Quick facts Leader, Founded ...

Otzma Yehudit left the union on 5 July 2019, citing disagreements with the party, such as the refusal of URWP members to resign to allow Itamar Ben-Gvir to become a Knesset member. In addition, Otzma was unwilling to leave Baruch Marzel and Benzi Gopstein off the electoral slate, as Rafi Peretz demanded.[10]

For the September 2019 election, the URWP ran on a joint list, called Yamina,[11] with the New Right,[12] to get both to pass the 3.25% threshold to enter the Knesset, after the New Right failed to pass the threshold in the April election.[13] The parties later split,[14] though Yamina re-formed for the 2020 Israeli legislative election.[15]

Remove ads

Background

Summarize
Perspective

In January 2019, Tkuma and Otzma entered talks to form a joint list;[16] however, the talks ultimately failed on 11 February 2019.[17]

On 12 February 2019, Otzma Yehudit entered talks with the Jewish Home party to reach an agreement on a joint list.[18]

On 15 February 2019, Tkuma and the Jewish Home party agreed to a form a list again, with Tkuma getting every other seat on the list.[19]

On 19 February 2019, it was reported that negotiations between Otzma Yehudit and the Jewish Home were deadlocked.[20]

On 20 February 2019, both Otzma Yehudit and the Jewish Home agreed to terms to form a list, after Netanyahu had promised the Jewish Home ministerial positions in exchange for uniting with Otzma Yehudit.[21] In order to facilitate this deal, Netanyahu also gave Jewish Home candidate Eli Ben-Dahan a position on the Likud party list, and formed a surplus-vote agreement between Likud and the URWP.[22]

The party attempted to get Yachad to join the technical list, but negotiations failed, due to the rabbi of Yachad, Rabbi Meir Mazuz, rejecting it,[23] although Eli Yishai, the head of Yachad, has claimed that Aryeh Deri vetoed Yishai's potential ministerial appointment.[24]

Otzma Yehudit announced on 25 June that it would leave the technical bloc over the refusal of the Jewish Home party to seat Itamar Ben-Gvir in the Knesset using the Norwegian law.[25]

On 29 July 2019, the URWP and the New Right reached a final agreement on joint run, with the New Right's Ayelet Shaked leading the joint list, which is[26] named Yamina.[27]

On 15 September, two days before the election, Yamina filed a motion to split back to the New Right and Jewish HomeNational Union. Shaked made a last ditch attempt to keep them together, without success.[28]

Remove ads

Controversy

Due to the Kahanist ideology of Otzma Yehudit, there was controversy surrounding Netanyahu attempting to get Otzma Yehudit to run on a list with the Jewish Home party, which led to it being condemned by the American Jewish Committee,[29] the Anti-Defamation League,[30] and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.[31] Yifat Erlich, who was formerly on the slate for The Jewish Home, left the party over the union with Otzma Yehudit.[32]

Michael Ben-Ari, who was placed fifth on the URWP list as part of Otzma Yehudit, was banned from running for the Knesset on 17 March 2019 by the Supreme Court of Israel.[33]

Remove ads

Composition

Leaders

More information Leader, Took office ...

Knesset election results

More information Election, Leader ...

Knesset members

More information Year, Members ...

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads