Atid (political party) explained

Atid
Leader:Alex Goldfarb
Founded:27 November 1995
Dissolved:1996
Split:Yiud
Merged:Center Party[1]
Ideology:Liberalism
Seats1 Title:Most MKs
Seats1:2 (1995–1996)
Seats2:2 (1995–1996)
Country:Israel

Atid (Hebrew: עתיד, lit. Future) was a short-lived liberal political faction in Israel in the mid-1990s.

It is not related to the modern parties Atid Ehad or Yesh Atid.

Background

The faction was established on 27 November 1995 during the 13th Knesset as a breakaway from Yiud, itself a breakaway from Tzomet following disagreements between party leader Rafael Eitan and three other MKs. Two of the MKs who had left Tzomet to form Yiud, Alex Goldfarb and Esther Salmovitz, then broke away to form Atid, leaving Gonen Segev as the only remaining member of Yiud.

The faction remained part of Shimon Peres' governing coalition and Goldfarb retained his post as Deputy Minister of Housing and Construction. After the Knesset term ended, the faction was dissolved and did not run in the 1996 elections.

It was subsumed by the Center Party.[1]

List of Knesset members

NameYears in officeGovernment rolesOther roles
Alex Goldfarb1995–1996Deputy Minister of Housing and Construction
Esther Salmovitz1995–1996

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Historical Dictionary of Israel . Reich . Bernard . Goldberg . David H. . Scarecrow Press . 2008 . 57 . 9780810864030.