Israel at the Polls, 1996Daniel J. Elazar, Shmuel Sandler Routledge, 8. 4. 2014 - Počet stran: 288 The 1996 Israeli elections were the first elections by direct vote for the position of prime minister in which a newcomer - Binyamin Netanyahu - defeated the most veteran Israeli politician, Shimon Peres. The result indicated not only a transition of power from the left-centre to the right-centre, but also the decline of the major parties and the ascendance of the smaller parties. Israel at the Polls, 1996 looks at the parties, election campaigns and the processes that determined this outcome. Major issues such as religion and politics, Israel as a Jewish state, the peace process, and the 'new politics' are analysed by outstanding Israeli political scientists. |
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14th Knesset 1981 elections 1996 elections Agudat Israel Arab parties Arab vote Arafat Ashkenazi assassination attacks Aviv Binyamin Netanyahu bombings camp candidates centrist coalition partners decline direct election election campaign electoral ethnic factor February foreign Golan Heights government’s Ha-aretz HAMAS Haredi Ibid ideological immigrant party impact Islamic Israeli election Israeli politics Israeli society Israeli voters issues Jerusalem Post Jewish Jews Knesset elections Knesset seats Labor party large parties leaders leadership Lebanon Likud Ma’ariv major Meretz Middle East Moledet negative negotiations opposition Oslo Accords Oslo agreements Palestinian party’s peace process percent Peres’s polls position prime minister prime ministerial Rabbi Rabin religious parties religious Zionist right-wing role Russian immigrants secular Sephardi Sharansky SHAS Shimon Peres smaller parties Soviet strategy Syria terrorism terrorist Torah traditional Tzomet ultra-Orthodox victory women’s representation Yediot Aharonot Yisrael Ba’Aliya Yitzhak