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Israeli Labor Party

The Israeli Labor Party (Hebrew: מִפְלֶגֶת הָעֲבוֹדָה הַיִּשְׂרְאֵלִית, romanizedMifleget HaAvoda HaYisraelit ), commonly known as HaAvoda (Hebrew: הָעֲבוֹדָה, lit.'The Labor'), is a social democratic[5][6][7][8] and Zionist[8][9] political party in Israel. The party was established in 1968 by a merger of Mapai, Ahdut HaAvoda, and Rafi. Until 1977, all Israeli Prime Ministers were affiliated with the Labor movement.[10] The current party leader is Merav Michaeli, who was elected in January 2021.

Labor Party
מפלגת העבודה
ChairpersonMerav Michaeli
Secretary GeneralEran Hermoni[1]
Founded23 January 1968; 55 years ago (1968-01-23)
Merger ofMapai
Ahdut HaAvoda
Rafi
HeadquartersTel Aviv
Youth wingIsraeli Young Labor
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left[2][3]
National affiliationAlignment (1968–1991)
One Israel (1999–2001)
Zionist Union (2014–2019)
European affiliationParty of European Socialists (observer)
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Colours    Red, blue
Knesset
4 / 120
Election symbol
אמת
أ‌م‌ت
[4]
Website
havoda.org.il

The Labor Party is associated with supporting the Israeli–Palestinian peace process, pragmatic foreign affairs policies and social-democratic economic policies.[11] The party is a member of the Progressive Alliance[12] and is an observer member of the Party of European Socialists.[13] The party was also a member of the Socialist International until May 2020.[14][15][16]

History

 
Israeli Labor Party ballot slip – "Emet"

Dominant political party 1968–1977

 
Original logo of the party from the 1980s

The foundations for the formation of the Israeli Labor Party were laid shortly before the 1965 Knesset elections when Mapai, the largest left-wing party in the country and the dominant partner in every government since independence, formed an alliance with Ahdut HaAvoda.[17] Mapai's Arab satellite lists followed the merger. The alliance was an attempt by Mapai to shore up the party's share of the vote following a break-away of eight MKs (around a fifth of Mapai's Knesset faction) led by former Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion to form a new party, Rafi, in protest against Mapai's failure to approve a change to the country's proportional representation electoral system.

The alliance, called the Labor Alignment won 45 seats in the elections, and was able to form the government in coalition with the National Religious Party, Mapam, the Independent Liberals, Poalei Agudat Yisrael, Progress and Development and Cooperation and Brotherhood. After the Six-Day War broke out, Rafi and Gahal joined the coalition.

On 23 January 1968, Mapai, Ahdut HaAvoda and Rafi (with the exception of Ben-Gurion, who formed the National List in protest) merged into one body, creating the Israeli Labor Party.[18][19] On 28 January 1969, the party allied itself with Mapam, the alliance becoming known as the Alignment.

As the largest faction within the Alignment, Labor came to dominate it. Mapam left during the eighth Knesset, but rejoined shortly afterwards.[citation needed]

During the 1970s, the welfare state was expanded[20][21] under successive Labor governments, with increases in pension benefits[22] and the creation of new social security schemes such as disability insurance and unemployment insurance in 1970, children's insurance in 1975, vacation pay for adopting parents in 1976,[23] a Family Allowance for Veterans in 1970, a benefit for Prisoners of Zion in 1973, and a mobility benefit and a Volunteers' Rights benefit in 1975.[24] During 1975–76, a modest program of housing rehabilitation was launched in a dozen or so older neighbourhoods,[25] while the Sick Leave Compensation Law of 1976 provided for compensation in cases when employees were absent from work because of illness.[26]

Opposition and comeback 1977–2001

 
Party logo adopted in 1992, which was used until 2016
 
Logo of the Labor-Meimad List during the 2003 election
 
Leaning version of the current party logo, adopted in 2016

In the 1977 elections, Labor ended up in opposition for the first time. In the 1984 elections, Labor joined a national unity government with Likud, with the post of Prime Minister rotating between the two parties.

Mapam broke away again during the eleventh Knesset, angry at Shimon Peres's decision to form a national unity government with Likud. Although the Independent Liberals merged into the Alignment in the 1980s, they had no Knesset representation at the time.

On 7 October 1991, the Alignment ceased to exist, with all factions formally merged into the Labor Party. At this time, the Likud government faced numerous problems, such as economic problems, the challenge of assimilating a large influx of immigrants from the former Soviet Union, serious tensions with the American government led by President George H. W. Bush[27] and internal division. Led by Yitzhak Rabin, Labor won the 1992 elections and formed the government, together with Meretz and Shas. In domestic policy, the Labor-led government introduced various measures to improve levels of social protection. Better provisions were introduced for single parents[28] and people with disabilities,[29] while income support entitlements were liberalised.[30]

The 1994 Law to Reduce Poverty and Income Inequality (which was extended a year later) increased income maintenance grants to needy families, particularly benefitting those sections of society most vulnerable to poverty.[31] In 1995, a national health insurance policy was implemented, making access to health care a right for all Israelis.[32]

Various measures were also introduced to bring greater progressivity into the system of collection of national insurance contributions.[33] A maternity grant for adopting mothers was introduced,[34] together with old-age insurance for housewives,[35] a minimum unemployment allowance,[36] and a partial injury allowance.[37] In addition, investments were made in numerous development projects[38] while affirmative action programmes were launched to hire Palestinian citizens in the public sector, the Ministry of Interior increased the budgets for Arab local councils, and the Ministry of Education increased the budget for Arab education.[39]

The subsequent role of Labor became to a large extent tied to the Oslo Accords, based on the principle "land for peace". The Oslo Accords led to a vote of confidence, which the Government won with a margin of 61–50 (8 abstained). Several MKs from the Government parties declined to support the Government, but on the other hand, the Arab parties came to its rescue. Due to the lack of a constitution in Israel, the Government was able to implement the accords with a thin margin.

Rabin's decision to advance peace talks with the Palestinians to the point of signing the Oslo Accords led to his assassination by Yigal Amir in 1995. Peres decided to call early elections in 1996 to give him a mandate for advancing the peace process. However, his ploy failed; although Labor won the most seats in the Knesset election, he lost to the election for Prime Minister to Benjamin Netanyahu following a wave of suicide bombings by Hamas. Netanyahu and Likud were thus able to form the government.

With his coalition falling apart, Netanyahu decided to call early elections in 1999. Ehud Barak won the internal primaries, and was nominated as the Labor candidate for Prime Minister. Meanwhile, the party entered an electoral alliance with Meimad and Gesher called One Israel. Barak won the Prime Minister election, whilst One Israel won the Knesset elections, albeit with only 26 seats.

Barak started by forming a 75-member coalition, together with Shas, Meretz, Yisrael BaAliyah, the National Religious Party, and United Torah Judaism. The coalition with religious parties (NRP, Shas, and UTJ) caused tensions with the secularist Meretz, who quit the coalition after a disagreement with Shas over the authority of the Deputy Education Minister. The rest of the parties left before the Camp David 2000 summit.

Decline since 2001

Following the October 2000 riots and the violence of the Second Intifada, Barak resigned from office. He then lost a special election for Prime Minister to Likud's Ariel Sharon. However, Labor remained in Sharon's coalition as he formed a national unity government with Likud, Labor, Shas, Yisrael BaAliyah and United Torah Judaism, and were given two of the most important cabinet portfolios; Peres was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs and Benjamin Ben-Eliezer was made Defense Minister. Labor supported Operation Defensive Shield, which was conducted in April 2002 against Palestinians in the West Bank. After harsh criticism that Peres and Ben-Elizer were "puppets" of Sharon and not promoting the peace process, Labor quit the government in 2003.[citation needed]

Prior to the 2003 elections, Amram Mitzna won the party primaries, and led the party into the election with a platform that included unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. The party was routed in the elections, winning only 19 seats, whilst Sharon's Likud won 38 (40 after Yisrael BaAliyah merged into the party). Subsequently, due to internal opposition, Mitzna resigned from the party leadership,[40] and soon afterwards was replaced by Shimon Peres.

Sharon invited Labor into the coalition to shore up support for the disengagement plan (effectively Mitzna's policy which he had earlier lambasted) after the National Union and the National Religious Party had left the government.[citation needed]

On 8 November 2005, Shimon Peres was replaced as the leader of the Labor party by the election of left-wing Histadrut union leader Amir Peretz in an internal Labor party ballot. Critics of Labor have argued that, over the years, the party had abandoned its socialist heritage in favor of economic and business elites, and had passed the mantle of custodian of the underprivileged to right-wing and religious parties.[41] Peretz stated his intention to reassert Labor's traditional socialist policies, and took the party out of the government. This prompted Sharon to resign and call for new elections in March 2006. Prior to the election, the political map had been redrawn, as Sharon and the majority of Likud's MKs, together with a number of Labor MKs, including Shimon Peres, and some from other parties, had formed the new political party Kadima. In the elections Labor won 19 seats, making it the second largest party after Kadima. It joined Ehud Olmert's Kadima-led government, with Peretz appointed Defense Minister. Labor's main coalition demand and campaign promise was raising the minimum wage.[42]

On 28 May 2007, a leadership election resulted in Ehud Barak and Ami Ayalon defeating Peretz who was pushed into third place. In the run-off election (required as neither Barak nor Ayalon received over 40% of the vote), Barak was re-elected as party chairman. Despite stating that he would withdraw the party from the government unless Olmert resigned,[43] Barak remained in government and took over as Defense Minister.

Prior to the 2009 elections Labor and Meimad ended their alliance, with Meimad ultimately running a joint list with the Green Movement (which did not pass the electoral threshold). Several prominent members left the party, including Ami Ayalon, and Efraim Sneh (who formed Yisrael Hazaka). In the elections, Labor was reduced to just 13 seats, making it the fourth largest party behind Kadima, Likud and Yisrael Beiteinu.[citation needed]

Analysing the downfall of the once dominant political party in Israel, Efraim Inbar of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies points to several factors. By forfeiting identification with the establishment and building of the State of Israel, symbolised by a predilection for military service and by the settling of the land of Israel, Labor lost its most important asset. Deserting the Zionist symbol of Jerusalem, by showing willingness to cede part of it to the Palestinians was an ill-fated move. Their association with the Oslo Accords meant that they could not avoid being discredited by its failure. Demographic factors have worked against Labor, as the growing Sefardi population, as well as the recent Russian-Jewish immigrants, have largely voted for other parties. Attempts to gain the support of the Israeli Arab voters have damaged the image of the party, and yielded no harvest.[41]

 
Seats held by the Labor party since its founding.

On 17 January 2011, disillusionment with party leader Ehud Barak, over his support for coalition policies, especially regarding the peace process, led to Barak's resignation from the Labor Party with four other Knesset members to establish a new "centrist, Zionist and democratic" party, Independence. Following this move, all Labor Party government ministers resigned.

Two days after the split, a group of prominent members of Israel's business, technology, and cultural communities including Jerusalem Venture Partners founder Erel Margalit founded the "Avoda Now" movement calling for a revival of the Labor Party. The movement launched a public campaign calling the people to support the Labor Party, with the aim of renewing its institutions, restore its social values, and choose new dynamic leadership.[44]

Shelly Yachimovich was elected leader in 2011 saying "I promise that we will work together. This is just the beginning of a new start for Israeli society." She was congratulated by many in the party including her one-time rival Amir Peretz.[45] Yachimovich was replaced as leader by Isaac Herzog in 2013.

In the 2013 legislative election held on 22 January 2013, Labor received 11.39% of the national vote, winning 15 seats.[46]

On 10 December 2014, party leader Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni, leader and founder of the Hatnuah party, announced an electoral alliance to contest the upcoming legislative election.[47] In the 2015 legislative election on 7 March 2015, the joint list Zionist Union received 24 seats in the Knesset, of which 19 belong to the Labor Party. Both parties remained independent parties while both represented by the Zionist Union faction in the Knesset. The partnership continued after Avi Gabbay was elected chairman of the party on 10 July 2017, until 1 January 2019, when Gabbay announced the dissolution of the union unilaterally.[48]

On 10 July 2018, the Labor Party suspended its membership of the Socialist International after the international adopted a policy of BDS towards Israel.[49]

Labor's support collapsed in the April 2019 legislative election, being reduced to only 4,43% of votes and 6 seats, marking it as the worst result in the party's history. Anger at Gabbay intensified, with poor election results, and negotiating with the right to join a Netanyahu led government. Longtime party member Peretz criticized Gabbay, tweeting "We will not enter or sit in his [Netanyahu] government. Every other option is a violation of everything we promised to the public"[50] Gabbay resigned in June.[51]

In July 2019, Amir Peretz was elected as the new leader of the Labor party.[52] A few weeks later, on 18 July 2019, ahead of the September 2019 election, Amir Peretz merged the party with the Gesher party, giving Gesher multiple spots on Labor's candidate list.[53]

On 12 January 2020, Labor announced that it was negotiating a joint list with Meretz to prevent the possibility of either party not making the electoral threshold and not entering the Knesset.[54] Labor and Meretz announced a joint run on 13 January 2020,[55] with the Labor party central committee voting in favor of ratification of the alliance the following day.[56] Meretz approved the alliance on 14 January.[57] The alliance submitted its list on 15 January under the name Labor-Gesher-Meretz.[58]

In March 2020, Gesher's only MK Orly Levy announced that she was splitting from the union due to their support of Benny Gantz's efforts to set up a minority government with the Joint List, with him as Prime Minister.[59] Gantz later abandoned that effort and instead joined a "national unity coronavirus government" headed by Benjamin Netanyahu. After repeatedly promising not to join a government headed by Netanyahu,[60][50][61] Peretz decided to bring Labor into that coalition headed by Netanyahu to "promote social justice" along with Gantz.[62]

On 22 April 2020, it was announced that Labor Party leader Amir Peretz would serve as Israel's Economic Minister as a result of a coalition agreement which was made following the 2020 Israeli legislative election and will coordinate with Blue and White on parliamentary matters and policy issues.[63][64][65] Despite agreeing to join the new government, Peretz also stated that he and other Labor MKs will still vote against a proposed West Bank annexation plan.[66] On 26 April 2020, 64.2% of the Labor Party's 3,840 central committee members approved of Peretz's decision to join the new government.[67][68] During the coalition talks, the party was under negotiations with Blue and White to implement a merger.[69] On 17 May 2020, Peretz was officially sworn in at the new Israeli economic minister.[70] Labor member Itzik Shmuli also joined the Israeli government after being sworn in as Israel's Minister of Welfare.[70]

Peretz decided to not run for re-election in the 2021 election and also resigned as leader. In the consequent leadership election, Merav Michaeli (who did not join the Netanyahu government) was elected leader. Labor, which was struggling to cross the threshold in polls taken before Michaeli became leader, increased their share of seats to 7. The party subsequently joined the new government.[71][72] Michaeli was re-elected leader ahead of the 2022 election. This was the first time the party re-elected its leader since primaries were held starting in 1992.[73] In the 2022 elections the party was reduced to four seats.

Political principles

Past

Mapai evolved from the socialist Poale Zion movement and adhered to the Socialist Zionist ideology promulgated by Nahum Syrkin and Ber Borochov. Under Ben-Gurion's leadership (1930–1954), Mapai focused mainly on a Zionist agenda, as establishing a homeland for the Jewish people was seen as the most urgent issue.

After the founding of the state of Israel, Mapai engaged in nation building—the establishment of the Israel Defense Forces (while dismantling every other armed group), the establishment of many settlements, the settling of more than 1,000,000 Jewish immigrants and the desire to unite all the inhabitants of Israel under a new Zionist Jewish Israeli culture (an ideology known as the "Melting pot" כור היתוך).

Labor in the past was more hawkish on security and defense issues than it is now. During its years in office, Israel fought the 1956 Sinai War, the Six-Day War and the Yom Kippur War.

Current

While originally a democratic socialist party, Labor has evolved into a programme that supports a mixed economy with strong social welfare programmes. In November 2005, Amir Peretz, leader of the social-democratic One Nation which had merged into Labor after a split in 1999,[74] was elected chairman of the party, defeating Shimon Peres. Under Peretz, especially in the 2006 electoral campaign, the party took a significant ideological turn, putting social and economic issues on top of its agenda, and advocating a social democratic approach (including increases in minimum wage and social security payments), in sharp contrast to the economically liberal policies led by former Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

In the post–Cold War era, the party's foreign policy retains a strong orientation toward the United States (especially the Democratic Party), and its security policy maintains that a permanent peace with the Palestinians can only be based on agreements that are enforceable.[75] Labor supports a two-state solution and the creation of an independent, demilitarized Palestinian state.[76]

On social issues, Labor supports same-sex marriage, the legalisation of cannabis, advancing surrogacy rights for gay couples and limited public transportation on Shabbat.[76]

Labor is committed to the continued existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. It believes in maintaining a strong defense force and also supports the promotion of individual human rights. It supports most Supreme Court decisions on the latter issue, as well as the adoption of a written constitution that would entrench human rights.[75] The party opposed the Nation State Bill in 2018, and since its passing has pledged to adding a clause emphasising equality for all citizens.[76]

Party leaders

No. Image Leader Took office Left office Prime Ministerial tenure Knesset elections Elected/reelected as leader
1   Levi Eshkol 1968 1969 1963–1969 1965 (as leader of Mapai) 1965 (Mapai)
2   Golda Meir 1969 1974 1969–1974 1969, 1973 1969
3   Yitzhak Rabin 1974 1977 1974–1977 1974, 1977 (Feb)
4   Shimon Peres 1977 1992 1984–1986 1977, 1981, 1984, 1988 1977 (Apr), 1980, 1984
(3)   Yitzhak Rabin 1992 1995 1992–1995 1992 1992
(4)   Shimon Peres 1995 1997 1995–1996 1996 1995[77]
5   Ehud Barak 1997 2001 1999–2001 1999 1997[77]
6   Binyamin Ben-Eliezer 2001 2002 2001[78]
7   Amram Mitzna 2002 2003 2003 2002[79]
(4)   Shimon Peres interim[80] 2003 2005 2003[80]
8   Amir Peretz 2005 2007 2006 2005[81]
(5)   Ehud Barak 2007 2011 2009 2007
9   Shelly Yachimovich 2011 2013 2013 2011
10   Isaac Herzog 2013 2017 2015 2013
11   Avi Gabbay 2017 2019 2019 (Apr) 2017
(8)   Amir Peretz 2019 2021 2019 (Sep), 2020 2019
12   Merav Michaeli 2021 Incumbent 2021, 2022 2021, 2022

Leadership election process

The rules adopted in 1963 by the preceding Mapai party for electing leaders saw the party's leader elected by a vote of its Central Committee. This initially remained the case with the Labor Party when it succeeded Mapai.[77] Beginning with the 1977 leadership election, the party shifted to electing its leaders by a vote of the party's convention delegates.[77] Following Rabin's resignation, only months after the February 1977 leadership election, the party opted against holding another convention vote, and instead selected Peres as its new leader by a vote of its Central Committee.[77] A vote of convention delegates was again used in the 1980 leadership election.[77]

At the party's 5th convention, rule change was adopted which shifted the election of party leaders to a vote of the party's general membership.[77] As a result, since 1992, Labor Party leaders have been through party membership votes, with excepting circumstances.[77] Excepting circumstances arose after the November 1995 assassination of Rabin, which saw the a vote of the party's Central Committee used to install Peres as the party's new leader.[77] Excepting circumstances again arose in 2003, when an internal vote of the party's Central Committee was used to select Shimon Peres to serve as they party's interim leader until a later vote for a new permanent leader.[80]

Other prominent members

Prominent former members include:

Election results

Knesset

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Government
1969 Golda Meir Part of Alignment
49 / 120
Coalition
1973 Part of Alignment
44 / 120
  5 Coalition
1977 Shimon Peres Part of Alignment
28 / 120
  16 Opposition
1981 Part of Alignment
40 / 120
  12 Opposition
1984 Part of Alignment
37 / 120
  3 Coalition
1988 Part of Alignment
39 / 120
  4 Coalition (1988–1990)
Opposition (1990–1992)
1992 Yitzhak Rabin 906,810 34.65 (#1)
44 / 120
  5 Coalition
1996 Shimon Peres 818,741 26.83 (#1)
34 / 120
  10 Opposition
1999 Ehud Barak Part of One Israel
23 / 120
  11 Coalition (1999–2002)
Opposition (2002–2003)
2003[a] Amram Mitzna 455,183 14.46 (#2)
18 / 120
  5 Opposition (2003–2005)
Coalition (2005)
Opposition (2005–2006)
2006[b] Amir Peretz 472,366 15.06 (#2)
18 / 120
  Coalition
2009 Ehud Barak 334,900 9.93 (#4)
13 / 120
  5 Coalition (2009–2011)
Opposition (2011–2013)
2013 Shelly Yachimovich 432,118 11.39 (#3)
15 / 120
  2 Opposition
2015 Isaac Herzog Part of Zionist Union
19 / 120
  4 Opposition
Apr 2019 Avi Gabbay 190,870 4.43 (#6)
6 / 120
  13 Snap election
Sep 2019 Amir Peretz Part of Labor-Gesher
5 / 120
  1 Snap election
2020 Part of Labor-Gesher-Meretz
3 / 120
  2 Coalition[c]
2021 Merav Michaeli 268,737 6.09 (#6)
7 / 120
  4 Coalition
2022 175,922 3.69 (#10)
4 / 120
  3 Opposition
  1. ^ With Meimad
  2. ^ with Meimad
  3. ^ Labor MKs Amir Peretz and Itzik Shmuli joined while MK Merav Michaeli did not.

Prime Minister

Election Candidate Votes % Result
1996 Shimon Peres 1,471,566 49.5 (#2) Lost
1999 Ehud Barak 1,791,020 56.1 (#1) Won
2001 Ehud Barak 1,023,944 37.6 (#2) Lost

Current MKs

Year Members Total
2022– Merav Michaeli, Naama Lazimi, Gilad Kariv, Efrat Rayten 4

See also

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External links

  • Official website   (in Hebrew)
  • Israel Labor Party Knesset website (in English)
  • Labor-Meimad Knesset website (in English)
  • Unofficial Labor Forum website (in Hebrew)
  • The Dangerous Lives of Doves in Israel By Kevin Peraino | NEWSWEEK Published 10 January 2009 From the magazine issue dated 19 January 2009

israeli, labor, party, hebrew, בו, ית, romanized, mifleget, haavoda, hayisraelit, help, info, commonly, known, haavoda, hebrew, בו, labor, social, democratic, zionist, political, party, israel, party, established, 1968, merger, mapai, ahdut, haavoda, rafi, unt. The Israeli Labor Party Hebrew מ פ ל ג ת ה ע בו ד ה ה י ש ר א ל ית romanized Mifleget HaAvoda HaYisraelit help info commonly known as HaAvoda Hebrew ה ע בו ד ה lit The Labor is a social democratic 5 6 7 8 and Zionist 8 9 political party in Israel The party was established in 1968 by a merger of Mapai Ahdut HaAvoda and Rafi Until 1977 all Israeli Prime Ministers were affiliated with the Labor movement 10 The current party leader is Merav Michaeli who was elected in January 2021 Labor Party מפלגת העבודה ChairpersonMerav MichaeliSecretary GeneralEran Hermoni 1 Founded23 January 1968 55 years ago 1968 01 23 Merger ofMapaiAhdut HaAvodaRafiHeadquartersTel AvivYouth wingIsraeli Young LaborIdeologySocial democracyLabor ZionismPolitical positionCentre left 2 3 National affiliationAlignment 1968 1991 One Israel 1999 2001 Zionist Union 2014 2019 European affiliationParty of European Socialists observer International affiliationProgressive AllianceColours Red blueKnesset4 120Election symbolאמת أ م ت 4 Websitehavoda wbr org wbr ilPolitics of IsraelPolitical partiesElectionsThe Labor Party is associated with supporting the Israeli Palestinian peace process pragmatic foreign affairs policies and social democratic economic policies 11 The party is a member of the Progressive Alliance 12 and is an observer member of the Party of European Socialists 13 The party was also a member of the Socialist International until May 2020 14 15 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 Dominant political party 1968 1977 1 2 Opposition and comeback 1977 2001 1 3 Decline since 2001 2 Political principles 2 1 Past 2 2 Current 3 Party leaders 3 1 Leadership election process 4 Other prominent members 5 Election results 5 1 Knesset 5 2 Prime Minister 6 Current MKs 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Israeli Labor Party ballot slip Emet Dominant political party 1968 1977 Edit Original logo of the party from the 1980s The foundations for the formation of the Israeli Labor Party were laid shortly before the 1965 Knesset elections when Mapai the largest left wing party in the country and the dominant partner in every government since independence formed an alliance with Ahdut HaAvoda 17 Mapai s Arab satellite lists followed the merger The alliance was an attempt by Mapai to shore up the party s share of the vote following a break away of eight MKs around a fifth of Mapai s Knesset faction led by former Prime Minister David Ben Gurion to form a new party Rafi in protest against Mapai s failure to approve a change to the country s proportional representation electoral system The alliance called the Labor Alignment won 45 seats in the elections and was able to form the government in coalition with the National Religious Party Mapam the Independent Liberals Poalei Agudat Yisrael Progress and Development and Cooperation and Brotherhood After the Six Day War broke out Rafi and Gahal joined the coalition On 23 January 1968 Mapai Ahdut HaAvoda and Rafi with the exception of Ben Gurion who formed the National List in protest merged into one body creating the Israeli Labor Party 18 19 On 28 January 1969 the party allied itself with Mapam the alliance becoming known as the Alignment As the largest faction within the Alignment Labor came to dominate it Mapam left during the eighth Knesset but rejoined shortly afterwards citation needed During the 1970s the welfare state was expanded 20 21 under successive Labor governments with increases in pension benefits 22 and the creation of new social security schemes such as disability insurance and unemployment insurance in 1970 children s insurance in 1975 vacation pay for adopting parents in 1976 23 a Family Allowance for Veterans in 1970 a benefit for Prisoners of Zion in 1973 and a mobility benefit and a Volunteers Rights benefit in 1975 24 During 1975 76 a modest program of housing rehabilitation was launched in a dozen or so older neighbourhoods 25 while the Sick Leave Compensation Law of 1976 provided for compensation in cases when employees were absent from work because of illness 26 Opposition and comeback 1977 2001 Edit Party logo adopted in 1992 which was used until 2016 Logo of the Labor Meimad List during the 2003 election Leaning version of the current party logo adopted in 2016 In the 1977 elections Labor ended up in opposition for the first time In the 1984 elections Labor joined a national unity government with Likud with the post of Prime Minister rotating between the two parties Mapam broke away again during the eleventh Knesset angry at Shimon Peres s decision to form a national unity government with Likud Although the Independent Liberals merged into the Alignment in the 1980s they had no Knesset representation at the time On 7 October 1991 the Alignment ceased to exist with all factions formally merged into the Labor Party At this time the Likud government faced numerous problems such as economic problems the challenge of assimilating a large influx of immigrants from the former Soviet Union serious tensions with the American government led by President George H W Bush 27 and internal division Led by Yitzhak Rabin Labor won the 1992 elections and formed the government together with Meretz and Shas In domestic policy the Labor led government introduced various measures to improve levels of social protection Better provisions were introduced for single parents 28 and people with disabilities 29 while income support entitlements were liberalised 30 The 1994 Law to Reduce Poverty and Income Inequality which was extended a year later increased income maintenance grants to needy families particularly benefitting those sections of society most vulnerable to poverty 31 In 1995 a national health insurance policy was implemented making access to health care a right for all Israelis 32 Various measures were also introduced to bring greater progressivity into the system of collection of national insurance contributions 33 A maternity grant for adopting mothers was introduced 34 together with old age insurance for housewives 35 a minimum unemployment allowance 36 and a partial injury allowance 37 In addition investments were made in numerous development projects 38 while affirmative action programmes were launched to hire Palestinian citizens in the public sector the Ministry of Interior increased the budgets for Arab local councils and the Ministry of Education increased the budget for Arab education 39 The subsequent role of Labor became to a large extent tied to the Oslo Accords based on the principle land for peace The Oslo Accords led to a vote of confidence which the Government won with a margin of 61 50 8 abstained Several MKs from the Government parties declined to support the Government but on the other hand the Arab parties came to its rescue Due to the lack of a constitution in Israel the Government was able to implement the accords with a thin margin Rabin s decision to advance peace talks with the Palestinians to the point of signing the Oslo Accords led to his assassination by Yigal Amir in 1995 Peres decided to call early elections in 1996 to give him a mandate for advancing the peace process However his ploy failed although Labor won the most seats in the Knesset election he lost to the election for Prime Minister to Benjamin Netanyahu following a wave of suicide bombings by Hamas Netanyahu and Likud were thus able to form the government With his coalition falling apart Netanyahu decided to call early elections in 1999 Ehud Barak won the internal primaries and was nominated as the Labor candidate for Prime Minister Meanwhile the party entered an electoral alliance with Meimad and Gesher called One Israel Barak won the Prime Minister election whilst One Israel won the Knesset elections albeit with only 26 seats Barak started by forming a 75 member coalition together with Shas Meretz Yisrael BaAliyah the National Religious Party and United Torah Judaism The coalition with religious parties NRP Shas and UTJ caused tensions with the secularist Meretz who quit the coalition after a disagreement with Shas over the authority of the Deputy Education Minister The rest of the parties left before the Camp David 2000 summit Decline since 2001 Edit Following the October 2000 riots and the violence of the Second Intifada Barak resigned from office He then lost a special election for Prime Minister to Likud s Ariel Sharon However Labor remained in Sharon s coalition as he formed a national unity government with Likud Labor Shas Yisrael BaAliyah and United Torah Judaism and were given two of the most important cabinet portfolios Peres was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs and Benjamin Ben Eliezer was made Defense Minister Labor supported Operation Defensive Shield which was conducted in April 2002 against Palestinians in the West Bank After harsh criticism that Peres and Ben Elizer were puppets of Sharon and not promoting the peace process Labor quit the government in 2003 citation needed Prior to the 2003 elections Amram Mitzna won the party primaries and led the party into the election with a platform that included unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip The party was routed in the elections winning only 19 seats whilst Sharon s Likud won 38 40 after Yisrael BaAliyah merged into the party Subsequently due to internal opposition Mitzna resigned from the party leadership 40 and soon afterwards was replaced by Shimon Peres Sharon invited Labor into the coalition to shore up support for the disengagement plan effectively Mitzna s policy which he had earlier lambasted after the National Union and the National Religious Party had left the government citation needed On 8 November 2005 Shimon Peres was replaced as the leader of the Labor party by the election of left wing Histadrut union leader Amir Peretz in an internal Labor party ballot Critics of Labor have argued that over the years the party had abandoned its socialist heritage in favor of economic and business elites and had passed the mantle of custodian of the underprivileged to right wing and religious parties 41 Peretz stated his intention to reassert Labor s traditional socialist policies and took the party out of the government This prompted Sharon to resign and call for new elections in March 2006 Prior to the election the political map had been redrawn as Sharon and the majority of Likud s MKs together with a number of Labor MKs including Shimon Peres and some from other parties had formed the new political party Kadima In the elections Labor won 19 seats making it the second largest party after Kadima It joined Ehud Olmert s Kadima led government with Peretz appointed Defense Minister Labor s main coalition demand and campaign promise was raising the minimum wage 42 On 28 May 2007 a leadership election resulted in Ehud Barak and Ami Ayalon defeating Peretz who was pushed into third place In the run off election required as neither Barak nor Ayalon received over 40 of the vote Barak was re elected as party chairman Despite stating that he would withdraw the party from the government unless Olmert resigned 43 Barak remained in government and took over as Defense Minister Prior to the 2009 elections Labor and Meimad ended their alliance with Meimad ultimately running a joint list with the Green Movement which did not pass the electoral threshold Several prominent members left the party including Ami Ayalon and Efraim Sneh who formed Yisrael Hazaka In the elections Labor was reduced to just 13 seats making it the fourth largest party behind Kadima Likud and Yisrael Beiteinu citation needed Analysing the downfall of the once dominant political party in Israel Efraim Inbar of the Begin Sadat Center for Strategic Studies points to several factors By forfeiting identification with the establishment and building of the State of Israel symbolised by a predilection for military service and by the settling of the land of Israel Labor lost its most important asset Deserting the Zionist symbol of Jerusalem by showing willingness to cede part of it to the Palestinians was an ill fated move Their association with the Oslo Accords meant that they could not avoid being discredited by its failure Demographic factors have worked against Labor as the growing Sefardi population as well as the recent Russian Jewish immigrants have largely voted for other parties Attempts to gain the support of the Israeli Arab voters have damaged the image of the party and yielded no harvest 41 Seats held by the Labor party since its founding On 17 January 2011 disillusionment with party leader Ehud Barak over his support for coalition policies especially regarding the peace process led to Barak s resignation from the Labor Party with four other Knesset members to establish a new centrist Zionist and democratic party Independence Following this move all Labor Party government ministers resigned Two days after the split a group of prominent members of Israel s business technology and cultural communities including Jerusalem Venture Partners founder Erel Margalit founded the Avoda Now movement calling for a revival of the Labor Party The movement launched a public campaign calling the people to support the Labor Party with the aim of renewing its institutions restore its social values and choose new dynamic leadership 44 Shelly Yachimovich was elected leader in 2011 saying I promise that we will work together This is just the beginning of a new start for Israeli society She was congratulated by many in the party including her one time rival Amir Peretz 45 Yachimovich was replaced as leader by Isaac Herzog in 2013 In the 2013 legislative election held on 22 January 2013 Labor received 11 39 of the national vote winning 15 seats 46 On 10 December 2014 party leader Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni leader and founder of the Hatnuah party announced an electoral alliance to contest the upcoming legislative election 47 In the 2015 legislative election on 7 March 2015 the joint list Zionist Union received 24 seats in the Knesset of which 19 belong to the Labor Party Both parties remained independent parties while both represented by the Zionist Union faction in the Knesset The partnership continued after Avi Gabbay was elected chairman of the party on 10 July 2017 until 1 January 2019 when Gabbay announced the dissolution of the union unilaterally 48 On 10 July 2018 the Labor Party suspended its membership of the Socialist International after the international adopted a policy of BDS towards Israel 49 Labor s support collapsed in the April 2019 legislative election being reduced to only 4 43 of votes and 6 seats marking it as the worst result in the party s history Anger at Gabbay intensified with poor election results and negotiating with the right to join a Netanyahu led government Longtime party member Peretz criticized Gabbay tweeting We will not enter or sit in his Netanyahu government Every other option is a violation of everything we promised to the public 50 Gabbay resigned in June 51 In July 2019 Amir Peretz was elected as the new leader of the Labor party 52 A few weeks later on 18 July 2019 ahead of the September 2019 election Amir Peretz merged the party with the Gesher party giving Gesher multiple spots on Labor s candidate list 53 On 12 January 2020 Labor announced that it was negotiating a joint list with Meretz to prevent the possibility of either party not making the electoral threshold and not entering the Knesset 54 Labor and Meretz announced a joint run on 13 January 2020 55 with the Labor party central committee voting in favor of ratification of the alliance the following day 56 Meretz approved the alliance on 14 January 57 The alliance submitted its list on 15 January under the name Labor Gesher Meretz 58 In March 2020 Gesher s only MK Orly Levy announced that she was splitting from the union due to their support of Benny Gantz s efforts to set up a minority government with the Joint List with him as Prime Minister 59 Gantz later abandoned that effort and instead joined a national unity coronavirus government headed by Benjamin Netanyahu After repeatedly promising not to join a government headed by Netanyahu 60 50 61 Peretz decided to bring Labor into that coalition headed by Netanyahu to promote social justice along with Gantz 62 On 22 April 2020 it was announced that Labor Party leader Amir Peretz would serve as Israel s Economic Minister as a result of a coalition agreement which was made following the 2020 Israeli legislative election and will coordinate with Blue and White on parliamentary matters and policy issues 63 64 65 Despite agreeing to join the new government Peretz also stated that he and other Labor MKs will still vote against a proposed West Bank annexation plan 66 On 26 April 2020 64 2 of the Labor Party s 3 840 central committee members approved of Peretz s decision to join the new government 67 68 During the coalition talks the party was under negotiations with Blue and White to implement a merger 69 On 17 May 2020 Peretz was officially sworn in at the new Israeli economic minister 70 Labor member Itzik Shmuli also joined the Israeli government after being sworn in as Israel s Minister of Welfare 70 Peretz decided to not run for re election in the 2021 election and also resigned as leader In the consequent leadership election Merav Michaeli who did not join the Netanyahu government was elected leader Labor which was struggling to cross the threshold in polls taken before Michaeli became leader increased their share of seats to 7 The party subsequently joined the new government 71 72 Michaeli was re elected leader ahead of the 2022 election This was the first time the party re elected its leader since primaries were held starting in 1992 73 In the 2022 elections the party was reduced to four seats Political principles EditPast Edit Mapai evolved from the socialist Poale Zion movement and adhered to the Socialist Zionist ideology promulgated by Nahum Syrkin and Ber Borochov Under Ben Gurion s leadership 1930 1954 Mapai focused mainly on a Zionist agenda as establishing a homeland for the Jewish people was seen as the most urgent issue After the founding of the state of Israel Mapai engaged in nation building the establishment of the Israel Defense Forces while dismantling every other armed group the establishment of many settlements the settling of more than 1 000 000 Jewish immigrants and the desire to unite all the inhabitants of Israel under a new Zionist Jewish Israeli culture an ideology known as the Melting pot כור היתוך Labor in the past was more hawkish on security and defense issues than it is now During its years in office Israel fought the 1956 Sinai War the Six Day War and the Yom Kippur War Current Edit While originally a democratic socialist party Labor has evolved into a programme that supports a mixed economy with strong social welfare programmes In November 2005 Amir Peretz leader of the social democratic One Nation which had merged into Labor after a split in 1999 74 was elected chairman of the party defeating Shimon Peres Under Peretz especially in the 2006 electoral campaign the party took a significant ideological turn putting social and economic issues on top of its agenda and advocating a social democratic approach including increases in minimum wage and social security payments in sharp contrast to the economically liberal policies led by former Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu In the post Cold War era the party s foreign policy retains a strong orientation toward the United States especially the Democratic Party and its security policy maintains that a permanent peace with the Palestinians can only be based on agreements that are enforceable 75 Labor supports a two state solution and the creation of an independent demilitarized Palestinian state 76 On social issues Labor supports same sex marriage the legalisation of cannabis advancing surrogacy rights for gay couples and limited public transportation on Shabbat 76 Labor is committed to the continued existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state It believes in maintaining a strong defense force and also supports the promotion of individual human rights It supports most Supreme Court decisions on the latter issue as well as the adoption of a written constitution that would entrench human rights 75 The party opposed the Nation State Bill in 2018 and since its passing has pledged to adding a clause emphasising equality for all citizens 76 Party leaders EditNo Image Leader Took office Left office Prime Ministerial tenure Knesset elections Elected reelected as leader1 Levi Eshkol 1968 1969 1963 1969 1965 as leader of Mapai 1965 Mapai 2 Golda Meir 1969 1974 1969 1974 1969 1973 19693 Yitzhak Rabin 1974 1977 1974 1977 1974 1977 Feb 4 Shimon Peres 1977 1992 1984 1986 1977 1981 1984 1988 1977 Apr 1980 1984 3 Yitzhak Rabin 1992 1995 1992 1995 1992 1992 4 Shimon Peres 1995 1997 1995 1996 1996 1995 77 5 Ehud Barak 1997 2001 1999 2001 1999 1997 77 6 Binyamin Ben Eliezer 2001 2002 2001 78 7 Amram Mitzna 2002 2003 2003 2002 79 4 Shimon Peres interim 80 2003 2005 2003 80 8 Amir Peretz 2005 2007 2006 2005 81 5 Ehud Barak 2007 2011 2009 20079 Shelly Yachimovich 2011 2013 2013 201110 Isaac Herzog 2013 2017 2015 201311 Avi Gabbay 2017 2019 2019 Apr 2017 8 Amir Peretz 2019 2021 2019 Sep 2020 201912 Merav Michaeli 2021 Incumbent 2021 2022 2021 2022Leadership election process Edit The rules adopted in 1963 by the preceding Mapai party for electing leaders saw the party s leader elected by a vote of its Central Committee This initially remained the case with the Labor Party when it succeeded Mapai 77 Beginning with the 1977 leadership election the party shifted to electing its leaders by a vote of the party s convention delegates 77 Following Rabin s resignation only months after the February 1977 leadership election the party opted against holding another convention vote and instead selected Peres as its new leader by a vote of its Central Committee 77 A vote of convention delegates was again used in the 1980 leadership election 77 At the party s 5th convention rule change was adopted which shifted the election of party leaders to a vote of the party s general membership 77 As a result since 1992 Labor Party leaders have been through party membership votes with excepting circumstances 77 Excepting circumstances arose after the November 1995 assassination of Rabin which saw the a vote of the party s Central Committee used to install Peres as the party s new leader 77 Excepting circumstances again arose in 2003 when an internal vote of the party s Central Committee was used to select Shimon Peres to serve as they party s interim leader until a later vote for a new permanent leader 80 Other prominent members EditProminent former members include Yigal Allon Acting Prime Minister Moshe Dayan Defense Minister Abba Eban Minister of Foreign Affairs Chaim Herzog President of Israel Isaac Herzog President of Israel Efraim Katzir President of Israel Yitzhak Navon President of Israel Zalman Shazar President of Israel Ezer Weizman President of IsraelElection results EditKnesset Edit Election Leader Votes Seats Government1969 Golda Meir Part of Alignment 49 120 Coalition1973 Part of Alignment 44 120 5 Coalition1977 Shimon Peres Part of Alignment 28 120 16 Opposition1981 Part of Alignment 40 120 12 Opposition1984 Part of Alignment 37 120 3 Coalition1988 Part of Alignment 39 120 4 Coalition 1988 1990 Opposition 1990 1992 1992 Yitzhak Rabin 906 810 34 65 1 44 120 5 Coalition1996 Shimon Peres 818 741 26 83 1 34 120 10 Opposition1999 Ehud Barak Part of One Israel 23 120 11 Coalition 1999 2002 Opposition 2002 2003 2003 a Amram Mitzna 455 183 14 46 2 18 120 5 Opposition 2003 2005 Coalition 2005 Opposition 2005 2006 2006 b Amir Peretz 472 366 15 06 2 18 120 Coalition2009 Ehud Barak 334 900 9 93 4 13 120 5 Coalition 2009 2011 Opposition 2011 2013 2013 Shelly Yachimovich 432 118 11 39 3 15 120 2 Opposition2015 Isaac Herzog Part of Zionist Union 19 120 4 OppositionApr 2019 Avi Gabbay 190 870 4 43 6 6 120 13 Snap electionSep 2019 Amir Peretz Part of Labor Gesher 5 120 1 Snap election2020 Part of Labor Gesher Meretz 3 120 2 Coalition c 2021 Merav Michaeli 268 737 6 09 6 7 120 4 Coalition2022 175 922 3 69 10 4 120 3 Opposition With Meimad with Meimad Labor MKs Amir Peretz and Itzik Shmuli joined while MK Merav Michaeli did not Prime Minister Edit Election Candidate Votes Result1996 Shimon Peres 1 471 566 49 5 2 Lost1999 Ehud Barak 1 791 020 56 1 1 Won2001 Ehud Barak 1 023 944 37 6 2 LostCurrent MKs EditYear Members Total2022 Merav Michaeli Naama Lazimi Gilad Kariv Efrat Rayten 4See also EditIsraeli Labor Party primariesReferences Edit Labor party calls primaries for February 12 The Times of Israel 31 December 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Cheryl Rubenberg 2003 The Palestinians In Search of a Just Peace Lynne Rienner Publishers p 410 ISBN 978 1 58826 225 7 Sharon Weinblum 2015 Security and Defensive Democracy in Israel A Critical Approach to Political Discourse Routledge p 10 ISBN 978 1 317 58450 6 מפלגת העבודה בראשות מרב מיכאלי Central Election Committee for the Knesset in Hebrew Retrieved 14 June 2021 Emilie van Haute Anika Gauja 2015 Party Members and Activists Routledge p 17 ISBN 978 1 317 52432 8 Richard Collin Pamela L Martin 2012 An Introduction to World Politics Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet Rowman amp Littlefield p 218 ISBN 978 1 4422 1803 1 Retrieved 18 July 2013 Rhodes Cook 2004 The Presidential Nominating Process A Place for Us Rowman amp Littlefield p 118 ISBN 978 0 7425 2594 8 Retrieved 19 August 2012 a b Sara E Karesh Mitchell M Hurvitz 2005 Encyclopedia of Judaism Infobase Publishing p 283 ISBN 978 0 8160 6982 8 James C Docherty Peter Lamb 2 October 2006 Historical Dictionary of Socialism Scarecrow Press p 179 ISBN 978 0 8108 6477 1 Retrieved 28 January 2013 History amp Overview of the Labor Party www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 26 February 2021 Israel Labour Party Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 13 September 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2014 Parties amp Organisations Progressive Alliance Retrieved 28 March 2020 Parties Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Party of European Socialists Members Socialist International Retrieved 26 February 2021 Israel s Labor party quits Socialist International after it adopts BDS The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 26 February 2021 International Socialist Coalition Blasts Israeli Labor for Joining Netanyahu s Pro annexation Government Haaretz Israel Political Parties Ahdut Ha avodah Jewish Virtual Library מפלגת העבודה מפלגת העבודה in Hebrew Retrieved 26 February 2021 Pitts Walker Ethel Ervin Kathryn 3 June 2014 Ervin Kathryn Walker Ethel P eds African American Scenebook doi 10 4324 9781315053653 ISBN 9781135693985 Swirski Shlomo 2004 Politics and Education in Israel Comparisons with the United States Taylor amp Francis p 204 ISBN 0203906721 Portugese Jacqueline 1998 Fertility Policy in Israel The Politics of Religion Gender and Nation Greenwood p 98 ISBN 0 275 96098 6 Ben Arieh A Gal J 2001 Into the Promised Land Issues Facing the Welfare State Praeger p 106 ISBN 9780275969059 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Social Security Administration 1 March 2011 Social Security Programs Throughout the World Asia and the Pacific 2010 Israel PDF Retrieved 12 September 2015 Gal John 2001 Values Categorical Benefits and Categorical Legacies in Israel In Asher Ben Arieh John Gal eds Into the Promised Land Issues Facing the Welfare State Greenwood p 126 ISBN 0 275 96905 3 Lazin Frederick A 1994 Politics and Policy Implementation Project Renewal in Israel State University of New York Press p 18 ISBN 0 7914 1691 7 Employment PDF The Ministry of Aliyah and Immigrant Absorption 16 July 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2015 How lonely little George H W Bush changed the US Israel relationship timesofisrael com Retrieved 13 May 2021 Flug Karnit Kasir Nitsa 2006 The Single Parent Law Labor Supply and Poverty PDF Israel Economic Review 4 1 59 110 Retrieved 26 February 2021 Changes to disability benefits International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Changes to income support entitlements International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Alisa C Lewin and Haya Stier 25 April 2002 Who Benefits the Most The Unequal Allocation of Transfers in the Israeli Welfare State PDF Social Science Quarterly Southwestern Social Science Association 83 2 Retrieved 12 September 2015 2BackToHomePage2 mfa gov il Retrieved 12 September 2015 Collection of contributions International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Maternity grant for adopting mother International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Old age insurance for housewives International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Unemployment allowances and minimum wages International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Payment of partial injury allowance International Social Security Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Sheves Shimon about the social and economic policies of Rabin s government YouTube youtube com Archived from the original on 17 November 2021 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Go Julian 19 September 2012 Political Power and Social Theory Emerald Group Publishing p 128 ISBN 9781780528670 Retrieved 18 March 2014 Mitzna s resignation speech Ynet co il 20 June 1995 Retrieved 25 April 2010 a b Nowak Romanowicz Alina 2001 Olof Efraim Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 20328 Kadima Labor talks making progress Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2020 Israel party votes to oust leader 29 May 2007 Retrieved 26 February 2021 Erel Margalit Announces His Candidacy to Lead the Labor Party Reuters 27 April 2011 Archived from the original on 26 July 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2011 Yacimovich celebrates becoming Labor leader We ve won Breaking News Jerusalem Post jpost com Retrieved 12 September 2015 Elections in Israel January 2013 mfa gov il Retrieved 12 September 2015 Labor Livni Agree to Join Forces Ahead of Elections National Haaretz Haaretz haaretz com Retrieved 12 September 2015 אזולאי מורן 1 January 2019 גבאי הדהים את לבני מפרק את המחנה הציוני ynet Hoffman Gil 10 July 2018 Israel s Labor party quits Socialist International after it adopts BDS Jerusalem Post a b Labor rejects Netanyahu s Finance Ministry offer The Jerusalem Post Jpost com Retrieved 31 March 2020 Winer Stuart staff The Times of Israel After stormy term Labor chief Gabbay announces he is quitting politics The Times of Israel Retrieved 31 March 2020 Amir Peretz elected Labor party leader Globes 7 March 2019 Retrieved 3 July 2019 Gil Hoffman Jeremy Sharon Tamar Beeri 18 July 2019 Labor nabs Orly Levy Abekasis Left joint list called off The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 18 July 2019 Raoul Wootliff 12 January 2020 Labor Meretz close in on deal to run as joint slate in March elections The Times of Israel Retrieved 12 January 2020 Elad Benari 13 January 2020 Labor and Meretz agree on joint run Arutz Sheva Retrieved 14 January 2020 Labor Conference approves the Labor Gesher Meretz joint run Arutz Sheva 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2020 Elad Benari 15 January 2020 Meretz approves agreement with Labor Arutz Sheva Retrieved 14 January 2020 Photo Labor Gesher Meretz party submits its list to the Knesset Arutz Sheva 15 January 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2020 MK Orly Levy Abekasis to split from left wing sit as independent WIN 17 March 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Staff writer Labor party head says he was offered the world to join Netanyahu led coalition The Times of Israel Retrieved 2 April 2020 Staff writer Read my lips Labor leader sheds iconic mustache after 47 years The Times of Israel Retrieved 2 April 2020 Wootliff Raoul Labor s Peretz and Shmuli on the way to unity government reports The Times of Israel Retrieved 31 March 2020 Wootliff Raoul 22 April 2020 After staking mustache on not joining Netanyahu Peretz defends doing so anyway Times of Israel Retrieved 22 April 2020 מנהלת הבדואים לפרץ בימין זועמים ערוץ 7 in Hebrew Retrieved 26 February 2021 UTJ Signs Coalition Deal Hamodia 22 April 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Israel Labor Party I will not vote in favour of annexation plan Middle East Monitor 23 April 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Labor leader Peretz wins his party s backing to join Netanyahu led government Times of Israel 26 April 2020 Retrieved 30 April 2020 Lis Jonathan 27 April 2020 Labor Party Convention Accepts Netanyahu Gantz Unity Government Proposal Haaretz Retrieved 30 April 2020 Blue and White Labor plan merger as Gantz and Netanyahu hold coalition talks The Times of Israel Retrieved 8 April 2020 a b After year of deadlock and days of delays Knesset swears in new Israeli government Haaretz Retrieved 26 February 2021 Israel opposition parties agree to form new unity government BBC News 3 June 2021 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Perez Pena Richard 13 June 2021 Israel s Parliament Approves New Government Ousting Netanyahu The New York Times Retrieved 14 June 2021 Carrie Keller Lynn 18 July 2022 Michaeli clinches second elected term as Labor leader a first in party s history The Times of Israel Retrieved 22 July 2022 Mergers and Splits Among Parliamentary Groups The Knesset Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b Baskin Judith Reesa ed 2010 The Cambridge Dictionary of Judaism and Jewish Culture Cambridge University Press p 303 ISBN 9780521825979 a b c Here we go again ToI s guide to the 37 parties still seeking your vote The Times of Israel a b c d e f g h i Kenig Ofer 2009 Democratizing Party Leadership Selection in Israel A Balance Sheet Israel Studies Forum 24 1 62 81 ISSN 1557 2455 JSTOR 41805011 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Hermann Peter 28 December 2001 Israel s Labor gets tilt to right Baltimore Sun Retrieved 25 January 2022 CNN com New Israeli Labor leader calls for party unity Nov 20 2002 www cnn com 20 November 2002 Retrieved 25 January 2022 a b c Israel s Labor Party Picks Peres as Its Interim Leader Los Angeles Times 20 June 2003 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Peres loses party leadership bid The Guardian 10 November 2005 Retrieved 25 January 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Israeli Labor Party Official website in Hebrew Israel Labor Party Knesset website in English Labor Meimad Knesset website in English Unofficial Labor Forum website in Hebrew The Dangerous Lives of Doves in Israel By Kevin Peraino NEWSWEEK Published 10 January 2009 From the magazine issue dated 19 January 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Israeli Labor Party amp oldid 1142833499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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