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Israeli/Palestinian Politics, Politics & Government - General & Miscellaneous, Israel/Palestine - History, Jewish History
The Elections in Israel 1999 by Asher Arian — book cover

The Elections in Israel 1999

by Asher Arian
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Overview

This volume highlights Israel's 1999 elections, in which the prime-ministerial race between incumbent Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak ended with Barak winning by the biggest landslide ever in Israel. Although some observers interpreted these results as a fundamental shift in public opinion, there is little evidence to support this. The book shows how old patterns funneled into a new system of voting produced the 1999 results, where a weak candidate (Barak) bested a wounded prime minister (Netanyahu) abandoned by most of his political allies. Leading social scientists from Israeli and American universities, using a variety of approaches and coming from diverse intellectual traditions, address topics including the emergence of political blocs, strategic voting, and split ticket voting. In addition to major party performance, special interest parties-who did better than ever in 1999-are also discussed, such as the haredi, ultra-orthodox, non-Zionist Shas, the anti-haredi secular Shinui, two parties appealing to former Soviet émigrés and Arab parties.

Author Biography: Asher Arian is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, a Senior Research Fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, and Professor of Political Science at the University of Haifa. Michal Shamir is Professor of Political Science at Tel Aviv University.

Synopsis

Considers the impact of the 1999 Israeli elections. This volume highlights Israel's 1999 elections, in which the prime-ministerial race between incumbent Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak ended with Barak winning by the biggest landslide ever in Israel. Although some observers interpreted these results as a fundamental shift in public opinion, there is little evidence to support this. The book shows how old patterns funneled into a new system of voting produced the 1999 results, where a weak candidate (Barak) bested a wounded prime minister (Netanyahu) abandoned by most of his political allies. Leading social scientists from Israeli and American universities, using a variety of approaches and coming from diverse intellectual traditions, address topics including the emergence of political blocs, strategic voting, and split ticket voting. In addition to major party performance, special interest parties-who did better than ever in 1999-are also discussed, such as the haredi, ultra-orthodox, non-Zionist Shas, the anti-haredi secular Shinui, two parties appealing to former Soviet émigrés and Arab parties.

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Editorials

Booknews

Arian (political science, City U. of New York) and Shamir (political science, Tel Aviv U.) introduce the candidates, parties, and blocs which culminated in Barak's 1999 landslide victory over Israeli prime minister Netanyahu. A dozen other views analyze aspects of elections to the 15th Knesseth including strategic voting, split-ticket voting, and Russian immigrants' pivotal role. Published in conjunction with the Israel Democracy Institute, where Arian is a senior fellow. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
September 18, 2009
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Pages
303
ISBN
9780791488812

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