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Prime Minister of Israel

The prime minister of Israel (Hebrew: רֹאשׁ הַמֶּמְשָׁלָה, romanizedRosh HaMemshala, lit.'Head of the Government', Hebrew acronym: רה״מ‎; Arabic: رئيس الحكومة, Ra'īs al-Ḥukūma) is the head of government and chief executive of the State of Israel.

Prime Minister of Israel
רֹאשׁ הַמֶּמְשָׁלָה
Prime Ministerial Standard[1]
Incumbent
Benjamin Netanyahu
since 29 December 2022
Prime Minister's Office
StyleHis Excellency
ResidenceBeit Aghion
NominatorKnesset
AppointerPresident
Term lengthFour years, renewable indefinitely
Inaugural holderDavid Ben-Gurion
Formation14 May 1948
DeputyAlternate Prime Minister
SalaryUS$170,000 annually[2]
Websitepmo.gov.il

Israel is a republic with a president as head of state. The president's powers are largely ceremonial; while the prime minister holds the executive power. The official residence of the prime minister, Beit Aghion, is in Jerusalem. The current prime minister is Benjamin Netanyahu of Likud, the ninth person to hold the position (excluding caretakers).

Following an election, the president nominates a member of the Knesset to become prime minister after asking party leaders whom they support for the position. The first candidate the president nominates has 28 days to put together a viable coalition. He then presents a government platform and must receive a vote of confidence from the Knesset to become prime minister. In practice, the prime minister is usually the leader of the largest party in the governing coalition. Between 1996 and 2001, the prime minister was directly elected, separately from the Knesset.[3]

Unlike most prime ministers in parliamentary republics, the prime minister is both de jure and de facto chief executive. This is because the Basic Laws of Israel explicitly vest executive power in the government, of which the prime minister is the leader.

History

The office of Prime Minister came into existence on 14 May 1948, the date of the Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, when the provisional government was created. David Ben-Gurion, leader of Mapai and head of the Jewish Agency, became Israel's first prime minister. The position became permanent on 8 March 1949, when the first government was formed. Ben-Gurion retained his role until late 1953, when he resigned to settle in the Kibbutz of Sde Boker. He was replaced by Moshe Sharett. However, Ben-Gurion returned in a little under two years to reclaim his position. He resigned for a second time in 1963, breaking away from Mapai to form Rafi. Levi Eshkol took over as head of Mapai and prime minister. He became the first prime minister to head the country under the banner of two parties when Mapai formed the Alignment with Ahdut HaAvoda in 1965. In 1968 he also became the only party leader to command an absolute majority in the Knesset, after Mapam and Rafi merged into the Alignment, giving it 63 seats in the 120-seat Knesset.

On 26 February 1969, Eshkol became the first prime minister to die in office. He was temporarily replaced by Yigal Allon, whose stint lasted less than a month, as the party persuaded Golda Meir to return to political life and become prime minister in March 1969. Meir was Israel's first woman prime minister, and the third in the world (after Sirimavo Bandaranaike and Indira Gandhi).

Meir resigned in 1974 after the Agranat Commission published its findings on the Yom Kippur War, even though it had absolved her of blame. Yitzhak Rabin took over, though he also resigned towards the end of the eighth Knesset's term following a series of scandals. Those included the suicide of Housing Minister Avraham Ofer after police began investigating allegations that he had used party funds illegally, and the affair involving Asher Yadlin (the governor-designate of the Bank of Israel), who was sentenced to five years in prison for having accepted bribes. Rabin's wife, Leah, was also found to have had an overseas bank account, which was illegal in Israel at the time.

Menachem Begin became the first right-wing prime minister when his Likud won the 1977 elections, and retained the post in the 1981 elections. He resigned in 1983 for health reasons, passing the reins of power to Yitzhak Shamir.

After the 1984 elections had proved inconclusive with neither the Alignment nor Likud able to form a government, a national unity government was formed with a rotating prime ministership – Shimon Peres took the first two years, and was replaced by Shamir midway through the Knesset term. Although the 1988 elections produced another national unity government, Shamir was able to take the role alone. Peres made an abortive bid to form a left-wing government in 1990, but failed, leaving Shamir in power until 1992. Rabin became prime minister for the second time when he led Labour to victory in the 1992 elections. After his assassination on 4 November 1995, Peres took over as prime minister.

Direct election

During the thirteenth Knesset (1992–1996) it was decided to hold a separate ballot for prime minister modeled after American presidential elections. This system was instituted in part because the Israeli electoral system makes it all but impossible for one party to win a majority. While only two parties—Mapai/Labour and Likud—had ever led governments, the large number of parties or factions in a typical Knesset usually prevents one party from winning the 61 seats needed for a majority.

In 1996, when the first such election took place, the outcome was a surprise win for Benjamin Netanyahu after election polls predicted that Peres was the winner.[4] However, in the Knesset election held at the same time, Labour won more votes than any other party (27%). Thus Netanyahu, despite his theoretical position of power, needed the support of the religious parties to form a viable government.

Ultimately Netanyahu failed to hold the government together, and early elections for both prime minister and the Knesset were called in 1999. Although five candidates intended to run, the three representing minor parties (Benny Begin of Herut – The National Movement, Azmi Bishara of Balad and Yitzhak Mordechai of the Centre Party) dropped out before election day, and Ehud Barak beat Netanyahu in the election. However, the new system again appeared to have failed; although Barak's One Israel alliance (an alliance of Labour, Gesher and Meimad) won more votes than any other party in the Knesset election, they garnered only 26 seats, the lowest ever by a winning party or alliance. Barak needed to form a coalition with six smaller parties to form a government.

In early 2001, Barak resigned following the outbreak of the al-Aqsa Intifada. However, the government was not brought down, and only elections for prime minister were necessary. In the election itself, Ariel Sharon of Likud comfortably beat Barak, taking 62.4% of the vote. However, because Likud only had 21 seats in the Knesset, Sharon had to form a national unity government. Following Sharon's victory, it was decided to do away with separate elections for prime minister and return to the previous system.

2003 onwards

The 2003 elections were carried out in the same manner as prior to 1996. Likud won 38 seats, the highest by a party for over a decade, and as party leader Sharon was duly appointed Prime Minister. However, towards the end of his term and largely as a result of the deep divisions within Likud over Israel's unilateral disengagement plan, Sharon broke away from his party to form Kadima, managing to maintain his position as prime minister and also becoming the first prime minister not to be a member of either Labour or Likud (or their predecessors). However, he suffered a stroke in January 2006, in the midst of election season, leading Ehud Olmert to become acting prime minister in the weeks leading to the elections. He was voted by the cabinet to be interim prime minister just after the 2006 elections, when Sharon had reached 100 days of incapacitation. He thus became Israel's third interim prime minister, only days before forming his own new government as the official Prime Minister of Israel.

In 2008, amid accusations of corruption and challenges from his own party, Olmert resigned. However his successor Tzipi Livni was unable to form a coalition government. In the election in the following year, while Kadima won the most seats, it was the Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu who was given the task of forming a government. He was able to do so, thus beginning his second term as Prime Minister of Israel.

In the 2013 election, the Likud Yisrael Beiteinu alliance emerged as the largest faction. After forming a coalition, Netanyahu secured his third prime ministership. In 2015, Netanyahu managed to stay in power. Multiple disagreements with his coalition members led to the 2019–2022 Israeli political crisis.

In 2021, Naftali Bennett became prime minister. He was succeeded in 2022 by his coalition partner, Yair Lapid.

Order of succession

If the prime minister dies in office, the cabinet chooses an interim prime minister[5] to run the government until a new government is placed in power. Yigal Allon served as interim prime minister following Levi Eshkol's death, as did Shimon Peres following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin.

According to Israeli law, if a prime minister is temporarily incapacitated rather than dies (as was the case following Ariel Sharon's stroke in early 2006), power is transferred to the acting prime minister, until the prime minister recovers (Ehud Olmert took over from Sharon), for up to 100 days. If the prime minister is declared permanently incapacitated, or that period expires, the president of Israel oversees the process of assembling a new governing coalition, and in the meantime the acting prime minister or other incumbent minister is appointed by the cabinet to serve as interim prime minister.

In the case of Sharon, elections were already due to occur within 100 days of the beginning of his coma; thus, the post-election coalition-building process pre-empted the emergency provisions for the selection of a new prime minister. Nevertheless, Olmert was appointed interim prime minister on 16 April 2006, after the elections, just days before he formed a government on 4 May 2006, becoming the official prime minister.

Acting, vice and deputy prime minister

Aside from the position of Acting Prime Minister, there are also vice prime ministers and deputy prime ministers.

Interim prime minister

The interim prime minister (Hebrew: ראש הממשלה בפועל, Rosh HaMemshala Ba-foal lit. "prime minister de facto") is appointed by the government if the incumbent is dead or permanently incapacitated, or if his tenure was ended due to a criminal conviction.

Israeli law distinguishes the terms acting prime minister (מלא מקום ראש הממשלה), filling in for the incumbent prime minister, temporarily, and acting in the incumbent's office, while the incumbent is in office, and an interim prime minister in office. Only if the incumbent prime minister becomes temporarily incapacitated will the acting prime minister act in the incumbent's office and will be standing in for him for up to 100 consecutive days, while the incumbent is in office. Legally, the "100 consecutive days" limit, in the language of the law, only stipulates that the incumbent then is deemed to be permanently incapacitated and that the limited time for an acting prime minister to act in the incumbent's office is over.

In 2006, Ehud Olmert, after standing in for Prime Minister Sharon for 100 consecutive days, as acting prime minister, did not automatically assume office as an interim prime minister. The government voted to appoint him, and in addition, he was also a member of prime minister's party, which enabled them to appoint him to the role.[6]

Shimon Peres was the foreign minister when Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated, and was voted unanimously to assume office as an interim prime minister until a new Government would be placed in power (that he later formed by himself). Yigal Allon was also voted to be the interim prime minister after Prime Minister Levi Eshkol suddenly died and served until Golda Meir formed her government.

Both the interim and acting prime ministers' authorities are identical to those of a prime minister, with the exception of not having the authority to dissolve the Knesset.

List of interim prime ministers

Name Party Dates in office
Yigal Alon Labour Alignment 26 February 1969 (1969-02-26) – 17 March 1969 (1969-03-17)
Shimon Peres Labour Alignment 4 November 1995 (1995-11-04) – 22 November 1995 (1995-11-22)
Ehud Olmert Kadima 14 April 2006 (2006-04-14) – 4 May 2006 (2006-05-04)

Interim government

An 'interim government' (Hebrew: ממשלת מעבר, Memshelet Ma'avar lit. "transitional government") is the same government, having been changed in their legal status, after the death, resignation, permanent incapacitation, or criminal conviction of the prime minister, as well as after the prime minister's request to dissolve the Knesset (Israeli parliament) was published through the president's decree, or after it was defeated by a motion of no confidence (these actions are regarded by the law as "the Government shall be deemed to have resigned"), or after election and before the forming of a new government.

Prime Minister's residence

Since 1974, the official residence of the prime minister is Beit Aghion, at the corner of Balfour and Smolenskin streets in Rehavia, Jerusalem.[7]

List of prime ministers of Israel

Term of office in years

See also

References

  1. ^ Flags of the Israel Defense Forces
  2. ^ "IG.com Pay Check". IG.
  3. ^ Basic Law: The Government (2001) Sections 7a, 13d.
  4. ^ Prime Minister Netanyahu. Remember? Maariv, 30 August 2005
  5. ^ Q&A: Israel's political future BBC News, 11 January 2006
  6. ^ "Cabinet Secretary Statement after the Cabinet meeting on 11 April 2006 (English)".
  7. ^ From modesty to monstrosity Haaretz, 1 May 2009

Further reading

External links

  • Official website
  • All Prime Ministers of Israel Knesset website
  • The PM's Who Shaped Israel – slideshow by The First Post
  • Family Trees of all Prime Minister of Israel

prime, minister, israel, list, list, prime, ministers, israel, prime, minister, israel, hebrew, אש, romanized, rosh, hamemshala, head, government, hebrew, acronym, רה, arabic, رئيس, الحكومة, Ḥukūma, head, government, chief, executive, state, israel, אש, emblem. For a list see List of prime ministers of Israel The prime minister of Israel Hebrew ר אש ה מ מ ש ל ה romanized Rosh HaMemshala lit Head of the Government Hebrew acronym רה מ Arabic رئيس الحكومة Ra is al Ḥukuma is the head of government and chief executive of the State of Israel Prime Minister of Israelר אש ה מ מ ש ל ה Emblem of IsraelPrime Ministerial Standard 1 IncumbentBenjamin Netanyahusince 29 December 2022Prime Minister s OfficeStyleHis ExcellencyResidenceBeit AghionNominatorKnessetAppointerPresidentTerm lengthFour years renewable indefinitelyInaugural holderDavid Ben GurionFormation14 May 1948DeputyAlternate Prime MinisterSalaryUS 170 000 annually 2 Websitepmo gov ilIsrael is a republic with a president as head of state The president s powers are largely ceremonial while the prime minister holds the executive power The official residence of the prime minister Beit Aghion is in Jerusalem The current prime minister is Benjamin Netanyahu of Likud the ninth person to hold the position excluding caretakers Following an election the president nominates a member of the Knesset to become prime minister after asking party leaders whom they support for the position The first candidate the president nominates has 28 days to put together a viable coalition He then presents a government platform and must receive a vote of confidence from the Knesset to become prime minister In practice the prime minister is usually the leader of the largest party in the governing coalition Between 1996 and 2001 the prime minister was directly elected separately from the Knesset 3 Unlike most prime ministers in parliamentary republics the prime minister is both de jure and de facto chief executive This is because the Basic Laws of Israel explicitly vest executive power in the government of which the prime minister is the leader Contents 1 History 1 1 Direct election 1 2 2003 onwards 2 Order of succession 2 1 Acting vice and deputy prime minister 2 2 Interim prime minister 2 2 1 List of interim prime ministers 2 3 Interim government 3 Prime Minister s residence 4 List of prime ministers of Israel 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistoryThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The office of Prime Minister came into existence on 14 May 1948 the date of the Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel when the provisional government was created David Ben Gurion leader of Mapai and head of the Jewish Agency became Israel s first prime minister The position became permanent on 8 March 1949 when the first government was formed Ben Gurion retained his role until late 1953 when he resigned to settle in the Kibbutz of Sde Boker He was replaced by Moshe Sharett However Ben Gurion returned in a little under two years to reclaim his position He resigned for a second time in 1963 breaking away from Mapai to form Rafi Levi Eshkol took over as head of Mapai and prime minister He became the first prime minister to head the country under the banner of two parties when Mapai formed the Alignment with Ahdut HaAvoda in 1965 In 1968 he also became the only party leader to command an absolute majority in the Knesset after Mapam and Rafi merged into the Alignment giving it 63 seats in the 120 seat Knesset On 26 February 1969 Eshkol became the first prime minister to die in office He was temporarily replaced by Yigal Allon whose stint lasted less than a month as the party persuaded Golda Meir to return to political life and become prime minister in March 1969 Meir was Israel s first woman prime minister and the third in the world after Sirimavo Bandaranaike and Indira Gandhi Meir resigned in 1974 after the Agranat Commission published its findings on the Yom Kippur War even though it had absolved her of blame Yitzhak Rabin took over though he also resigned towards the end of the eighth Knesset s term following a series of scandals Those included the suicide of Housing Minister Avraham Ofer after police began investigating allegations that he had used party funds illegally and the affair involving Asher Yadlin the governor designate of the Bank of Israel who was sentenced to five years in prison for having accepted bribes Rabin s wife Leah was also found to have had an overseas bank account which was illegal in Israel at the time Menachem Begin became the first right wing prime minister when his Likud won the 1977 elections and retained the post in the 1981 elections He resigned in 1983 for health reasons passing the reins of power to Yitzhak Shamir After the 1984 elections had proved inconclusive with neither the Alignment nor Likud able to form a government a national unity government was formed with a rotating prime ministership Shimon Peres took the first two years and was replaced by Shamir midway through the Knesset term Although the 1988 elections produced another national unity government Shamir was able to take the role alone Peres made an abortive bid to form a left wing government in 1990 but failed leaving Shamir in power until 1992 Rabin became prime minister for the second time when he led Labour to victory in the 1992 elections After his assassination on 4 November 1995 Peres took over as prime minister Direct election During the thirteenth Knesset 1992 1996 it was decided to hold a separate ballot for prime minister modeled after American presidential elections This system was instituted in part because the Israeli electoral system makes it all but impossible for one party to win a majority While only two parties Mapai Labour and Likud had ever led governments the large number of parties or factions in a typical Knesset usually prevents one party from winning the 61 seats needed for a majority In 1996 when the first such election took place the outcome was a surprise win for Benjamin Netanyahu after election polls predicted that Peres was the winner 4 However in the Knesset election held at the same time Labour won more votes than any other party 27 Thus Netanyahu despite his theoretical position of power needed the support of the religious parties to form a viable government Ultimately Netanyahu failed to hold the government together and early elections for both prime minister and the Knesset were called in 1999 Although five candidates intended to run the three representing minor parties Benny Begin of Herut The National Movement Azmi Bishara of Balad and Yitzhak Mordechai of the Centre Party dropped out before election day and Ehud Barak beat Netanyahu in the election However the new system again appeared to have failed although Barak s One Israel alliance an alliance of Labour Gesher and Meimad won more votes than any other party in the Knesset election they garnered only 26 seats the lowest ever by a winning party or alliance Barak needed to form a coalition with six smaller parties to form a government In early 2001 Barak resigned following the outbreak of the al Aqsa Intifada However the government was not brought down and only elections for prime minister were necessary In the election itself Ariel Sharon of Likud comfortably beat Barak taking 62 4 of the vote However because Likud only had 21 seats in the Knesset Sharon had to form a national unity government Following Sharon s victory it was decided to do away with separate elections for prime minister and return to the previous system 2003 onwards The 2003 elections were carried out in the same manner as prior to 1996 Likud won 38 seats the highest by a party for over a decade and as party leader Sharon was duly appointed Prime Minister However towards the end of his term and largely as a result of the deep divisions within Likud over Israel s unilateral disengagement plan Sharon broke away from his party to form Kadima managing to maintain his position as prime minister and also becoming the first prime minister not to be a member of either Labour or Likud or their predecessors However he suffered a stroke in January 2006 in the midst of election season leading Ehud Olmert to become acting prime minister in the weeks leading to the elections He was voted by the cabinet to be interim prime minister just after the 2006 elections when Sharon had reached 100 days of incapacitation He thus became Israel s third interim prime minister only days before forming his own new government as the official Prime Minister of Israel In 2008 amid accusations of corruption and challenges from his own party Olmert resigned However his successor Tzipi Livni was unable to form a coalition government In the election in the following year while Kadima won the most seats it was the Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu who was given the task of forming a government He was able to do so thus beginning his second term as Prime Minister of Israel In the 2013 election the Likud Yisrael Beiteinu alliance emerged as the largest faction After forming a coalition Netanyahu secured his third prime ministership In 2015 Netanyahu managed to stay in power Multiple disagreements with his coalition members led to the 2019 2022 Israeli political crisis In 2021 Naftali Bennett became prime minister He was succeeded in 2022 by his coalition partner Yair Lapid Order of successionIf the prime minister dies in office the cabinet chooses an interim prime minister 5 to run the government until a new government is placed in power Yigal Allon served as interim prime minister following Levi Eshkol s death as did Shimon Peres following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin According to Israeli law if a prime minister is temporarily incapacitated rather than dies as was the case following Ariel Sharon s stroke in early 2006 power is transferred to the acting prime minister until the prime minister recovers Ehud Olmert took over from Sharon for up to 100 days If the prime minister is declared permanently incapacitated or that period expires the president of Israel oversees the process of assembling a new governing coalition and in the meantime the acting prime minister or other incumbent minister is appointed by the cabinet to serve as interim prime minister In the case of Sharon elections were already due to occur within 100 days of the beginning of his coma thus the post election coalition building process pre empted the emergency provisions for the selection of a new prime minister Nevertheless Olmert was appointed interim prime minister on 16 April 2006 after the elections just days before he formed a government on 4 May 2006 becoming the official prime minister Acting vice and deputy prime minister Main article Deputy leaders of Israel Aside from the position of Acting Prime Minister there are also vice prime ministers and deputy prime ministers Interim prime minister The interim prime minister Hebrew ראש הממשלה בפועל Rosh HaMemshala Ba foal lit prime minister de facto is appointed by the government if the incumbent is dead or permanently incapacitated or if his tenure was ended due to a criminal conviction Israeli law distinguishes the terms acting prime minister מלא מקום ראש הממשלה filling in for the incumbent prime minister temporarily and acting in the incumbent s office while the incumbent is in office and an interim prime minister in office Only if the incumbent prime minister becomes temporarily incapacitated will the acting prime minister act in the incumbent s office and will be standing in for him for up to 100 consecutive days while the incumbent is in office Legally the 100 consecutive days limit in the language of the law only stipulates that the incumbent then is deemed to be permanently incapacitated and that the limited time for an acting prime minister to act in the incumbent s office is over In 2006 Ehud Olmert after standing in for Prime Minister Sharon for 100 consecutive days as acting prime minister did not automatically assume office as an interim prime minister The government voted to appoint him and in addition he was also a member of prime minister s party which enabled them to appoint him to the role 6 Shimon Peres was the foreign minister when Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated and was voted unanimously to assume office as an interim prime minister until a new Government would be placed in power that he later formed by himself Yigal Allon was also voted to be the interim prime minister after Prime Minister Levi Eshkol suddenly died and served until Golda Meir formed her government Both the interim and acting prime ministers authorities are identical to those of a prime minister with the exception of not having the authority to dissolve the Knesset List of interim prime ministers Name Party Dates in officeYigal Alon Labour Alignment 26 February 1969 1969 02 26 17 March 1969 1969 03 17 Shimon Peres Labour Alignment 4 November 1995 1995 11 04 22 November 1995 1995 11 22 Ehud Olmert Kadima 14 April 2006 2006 04 14 4 May 2006 2006 05 04 Interim government An interim government Hebrew ממשלת מעבר Memshelet Ma avar lit transitional government is the same government having been changed in their legal status after the death resignation permanent incapacitation or criminal conviction of the prime minister as well as after the prime minister s request to dissolve the Knesset Israeli parliament was published through the president s decree or after it was defeated by a motion of no confidence these actions are regarded by the law as the Government shall be deemed to have resigned or after election and before the forming of a new government Prime Minister s residenceSince 1974 the official residence of the prime minister is Beit Aghion at the corner of Balfour and Smolenskin streets in Rehavia Jerusalem 7 List of prime ministers of IsraelMain article List of prime ministers of Israel Term of office in yearsMain article List of prime ministers of Israel Term of office in yearsSee alsoPrime Minister s Office Israel Cabinet of Israel Beit Aghion Beit Rosh ha MemshalaReferences Flags of the Israel Defense Forces IG com Pay Check IG Basic Law The Government 2001 Sections 7a 13d Prime Minister Netanyahu Remember Maariv 30 August 2005 Q amp A Israel s political future BBC News 11 January 2006 Cabinet Secretary Statement after the Cabinet meeting on 11 April 2006 English From modesty to monstrosity Haaretz 1 May 2009Further readingAvner Yehuda 2010 The Prime Ministers An Intimate Narrative of Israeli Leadership Israel Toby Press ISBN 978 1 59264 278 6 OCLC 758724969 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prime ministers of Israel Official website All Prime Ministers of Israel Knesset website The PM s Who Shaped Israel slideshow by The First Post Family Trees of all Prime Minister of Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prime Minister of Israel amp oldid 1132729652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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