Yisrael Hazaka
Yisrael Hazaka (Hebrew: ישראל חזקה, lit. Strong Israel) was a political party in Israel. It was established by former Labor Party MK Efraim Sneh on 25 May 2008.[1] It participated in the 2009 Knesset elections but failed to pass the electoral threshold, receiving 6,722 votes (0.20%) and not receiving any seats.
Yisrael Hazaka | |
---|---|
Leader | Efraim Sneh |
Founded | 2008 |
Split from | Israeli Labor Party |
Ideology |
Social democracy Two-state solution |
Political position | Centre-left |
Election symbol | |
חי | |
Background
The party was established in May 2008, and received its licence from the party registrar at the end of September.
Although Israel uses the closed list method of party list proportional representation, Yisrael Hazaka announced that it would conduct a primary election open to the general public (after a party committee decides on who is eligible to run, given their contributions to the country) to determine its candidates for the Knesset.[2]
Notable members included former Shinui MK Erela Golan (who wrote the party's policy on religion and state),[3] and former Labor MK Michael Bar-Zohar.
Ideology
Party policies include:[3]
- Giving equal status to all streams of Judaism
- Not allowing enemy countries to have nuclear weapons
- Restoring and rebuilding the welfare state
References
- ↑ Ephraim Sneh, M.D. (25 May 2008). "I am proud to announce I established a new political party "Israel Hazaka" (Strong Israel)". Retrieved 2 February 2014.
- ↑ Gil Hoffman (25 October 2008). "Politics: Replacement ideology". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
- 1 2 Gil Hoffman (5 October 2008). "Sneh's new party calls for religious equality". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 24 June 2015.