Labor-Gesher Explained

Colorcode:
  1. EE161F
Labor-Gesher
Leader:Amir Peretz
Orly Levy
Foundation:18 July 2019
Successor:Labor-Gesher-Meretz
Dissolved:23 March 2020[1]
Affiliation1 Title:Member parties
Affiliation1:Labor
Gesher
Colours: Red, black
Country:Israel
Slogan:People before everything.
Ideology:Labor Zionism
Social democracy
Social liberalism
Two-state solution
Economic egalitarianism
Position:Centre-left
Seats1 Title:Most MKs

Labor-Gesher was a joint list of the Israeli Labor Party and Gesher parties for elections for the twenty-second Knesset.[2] [3] The list advocated social democracy and progressive taxation. The list's platform focused primarily on socio-economic issues. The list was jointly headed by Amir Peretz of the Israeli Labor Party and Orly Levy of the Gesher party.

The list was superseded by the Labor-Gesher-Meretz list for the 2020 Israeli legislative election.[4]

Formation and history

The Labor party'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. In reaction to the bad result, party leader Avi Gabbay and MK Tal Russo resigned, leading to a leadership election being called. In July 2019, Amir Peretz was elected as the new leader of the Labor party. Peretz declared that he would reform the party and bring in new forces and demographics to expand the party's base. Nitzan Horowitz, the newly elected leader of Meretz and former Labor party leader and prime minister Ehud Barak, called on Peretz to enter talks on setting up a united left wing list.[5] Shortly after the leadership election, another Labor MK Shelly Yachimovich also resigned, meaning half of Labor's Knesset representation was now resigned.[6]

On 18 July 2019, Amir Peretz and Orly Levy-Abekasis, the chairwoman of Gesher, announced a joint run in the elections for the twenty-second Knesset. Gesher would receive three out of the first ten spots on Labor's list. Peretz decided that the list would not be joined by other parties, shunning Meretz and Ehud Barak.[7]

The merger with Gesher was met with protests within the Labor party, and MKs Stav Shaffir and Itzik Shmuli were dissatisfied that Peretz shunned the merger with Meretz and Barak. This dissatisfaction led to the resignation of Stav Shaffir, who left the Labor party to form the Democratic Union with Meretz and Ehud Barak. Shmuli eventually decided to remain in the Labor party and criticized his colleague's move.[8]

On 25 August, Amir Peretz shaved his signature mustache, telling voters to "read his lips" and that he and the Labor-Gesher alliance would not sit in a government led by Benjamin Netanyahu.[9] However, Peretz has considered becoming a minister in a Netanyahu government.[10]

The alliance was officially dissolved on 23 March 2020, when Levy left the alliance to protest the possible formation of a minority government headed by Blue and White and backed by the Joint List.[1]

Economic plan

The Labor-Gesher alliance's signature proposal was their socio-economic plan which the party calls "People before everything". The plan included:[11]

These proposals and plans would have been funded by:

The proposal received criticism from the economic right shortly after its announcement. Naftali Bennett of the right wing Yamina party said the plan would "turn Israel into Venezuela",[12] this criticism was also supported by Yair Lapid of the centrist Blue and White party.[13]

Composition

NameIdeologyPositionLeaderFormer MKs
LaborSocial democracyCentre-leftAmir Peretz
GesherSocial liberalismCentre to Centre-leftOrly Levy

Former MKs

The Labor-Gesher alliance had four Knesset members. They are listed below in the order that they appeared on the party's list for the list for the 2020 elections:[14]

Labor, Gesher

NameNotes
1Amir PeretzLabor leader and former Minister of Defense
2Orly LevyGesher leader and former Yisrael Beiteinu MK
3Itzik ShmuliLabor MK and leader of 2011 Israeli social justice protests
4Merav MichaeliLabor MK, feminist activist and journalist

Notes and References

  1. News: You can go your own way: Arrangements Committee approves MK's request to part from Labor-Meretz . . 5 April 2020 . 23 March 2020.
  2. News: All the Candidates Running in Israel's September Do-over Election. Haaretz. 2 August 2019. 29 August 2019.
  3. News: Labor nabs Orly Levy-Abekasis, Left joint list called off . 18 July 2019 . The Jerusalem Post. Gil Hoffman. Jeremy Sharon. Tamar Beeri. 18 July 2019.
  4. News: Israel Election Results: The Left Learned the Hard Way That the Whole Is Smaller Than Its Parts. Haaretz. 7 March 2020. 3 March 2020. Jonathan Lis.
  5. News: Tal Schneider . Amir Peretz elected Labor party leader. Globes . 3 July 2019.
  6. News: Mordechai Sones . 16 July 2019 . Shelly Yachimovich resigns from politics . Arutz Sheva . 16 July 2019.
  7. Web site: Labor's Peretz joins forces with Orly Levy-Abekasis, shuns Meretz. The Times of Israel. Michael Bachner. Staff writer. Staff writer. 18 July 2019. 18 July 2019.
  8. Web site: Labor's Shmuli spars with former colleague Stav Shaffir for ditching party. The Times of Israel. Staff writer. 28 July 2019. 3 September 2019.
  9. Web site: 'Read my lips': Labor leader sheds iconic mustache after 47 years. The Times of Israel. Staff writer. 25 August 2019. 3 September 2019.
  10. Web site: Labor head ends merger with Meretz, in move toward joining government. The Times of Israel. Staff writer. 5 April 2020. 5 April 2020.
  11. Web site: Netanyahu abandons citizens of Israel. he:נתניהו מפקיר את אזרחי ישראל . Labor-Gesher . he .
  12. News: Bennett says Labor chief's economic plan will turn Israel into Venezuela. Times of Israel. 12 August 2019. 3 September 2019.
  13. News: התוכנית של העבודה-גשר אינה "קיצונית". Globes. 13 August 2019. 3 September 2019.
  14. Web site: Israel Election 2020: All the Candidates Running in the March 2 Election. 16 January 2020. Haaretz. Article Writer. 16 January 2020.