The purpose of this special update is to periodically inform the
interested public regarding the upcoming Israeli elections. As a
service of the Israel Foreign Ministry, this publication will
endeavor to provide basic and current information on the democratic
process in Israel, without promoting any candidate or party in
particular.
Updated May 20, 1999
Final Results
First vote in the Israeli 1999 elections cast by the Israeli Ambassador to New Zealand -
(Wellington, May 5).
In the two days preceding the elections, three of the candidates for prime minister withdrew from the race:
Azmi Bishara, MK (National Democratic Alliance)
Yitzhak Mordechai, MK (Center)
Ze'ev Benjamin Begin, MK (National Unity)
leaving only two candidates in the running:
Benjamin Netanyahu, incumbent Prime Minister (Likud)
Ehud Barak, MK (One Israel)
- The Electoral System: The Knesset Votes for Early Election
- The Knesset Race: Background Information
- Eligibility Requirements for Voters/Voter Register
- Eligibility Requirements for Knesset Candidates
- Eligibility Requirements for the Prime Minister
- The Prime Ministerial Race: Meet the Candidates
- Party Registration and Party List
- Candidates for the 15th Knesset
- Campaigning Regulations
- Election Finance: Background Information
- Election Day Background Information and Voting Procedures (GPO)
- Elections 1999 - Timetable
- On-line election information
- What Happens Now?
The Electoral System: The Knesset Votes for Early Elections
On January 4, the Knesset (the Israeli Parliament) voted to conduct
early elections for Prime Minister and Knesset members on May 17,
1999. The elections were originally scheduled to take place in
October 2000, but the political situation in Israel has led both
legislators and ministers to support the holding of elections within
a few months. The following is an excerpt from the Jerusalem Post of January 5, 1999:
"In the final step toward early elections, the 14th Knesset voted
overwhelmingly last night [January 4] to dissolve itself and hold a
new ballot on May 17, formally cutting short the term of the
Netanyahu government by one year and five months. The 85-27 vote,
with one abstention, also marks the official start of the campaign
season.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who supported the bill on first
reading two weeks ago to show he was an initiator of early elections,
absented himself from the vote on the second and third readings,
taking his seat just after the results were announced. Foreign
Minister Ariel Sharon and Shas leader Aryeh Deri were also absent.
In another vote, the Knesset then passed a law that calls for
elections to be held within 90 days instead of 60 in the event that
the government falls in a no-confidence vote. The law also states
that no-confidence motions cannot be submitted 120 days before a set
election day.
The early elections bill was passed despite last-ditch efforts by
nationalistic elements, including the National Religious Party and
settlers, to torpedo it. Instead, the bill won greater support last
night, after passing in its first reading by 81-30.
All nine NRP and nine Shas MKs voted against the bill, in addition to
Justice Minister Tzahi Hanegbi, Health Minister Yehoshua Matza, and
several Likud MKs. Uzi Landau (Likud) abstained. Yisrael Ba'aliya's
Michael Nudelman and Marina Solodkin also voted against, as did
Avraham Ravitz (United Torah Judaism). Renegade Laborite Rafik
Haj-Yihye, whose political future is uncertain, did not arrive for
the vote.
Law Committee chairman Hanan Porat (NRP) called on the Knesset to
stop its work on March 17 and not before, due to the primaries. He
emphasized that the government remains in office, and only elections
are being advanced."
The Knesset Race: Background Information
The framework of the Israeli electoral system is defined in Article 4 of
the Basic Law: The Knesset, which
states:
"The Knesset shall be elected by
general, national, direct, equal, secret and
proportional elections, in
accordance with the Knesset Elections Law; this section shall not be
varied save by a majority of the members of the Knesset."
- General: Every Israeli citizen aged 18 or older has
the right to vote,
and every citizen aged 21 or older is eligible for election to the
Knesset. (The president, state comptroller, judges and senior public
officials, as well as the chief-of-staff and high-ranking military
officers, may not stand for election to the Knesset unless they have
resigned their position at least 100 days before the elections.)
- National: The entire country constitutes a single
electoral
constituency.
- Direct: The Knesset, the Israeli parliament, is
elected directly by
the voters, not through a body of electors.
- Equal: All votes cast are equal in weight.
- Secret: Elections are by secret ballot.
- Proportional: The 120 Knesset seats are assigned in proportion to
each party's percentage of the total national vote. However, the
minimum required for a party to win a Knesset seat is 1.5% of the
total votes cast.
In the past, the task of forming a government and heading it as prime
minister was assigned by the president to the Knesset Member
considered to have the best chance of forming a viable coalition
government in light of the Knesset election results. This resulted in
a situation which accorded undue influence to small factions which,
in return for their support of the coalition, made demands
inconsistent with their relative size. In order to prevent this, in
1992 the Knesset enacted legislation providing for the direct
election of prime minister.
The new version of the Basic
Law: The Government entered into effect with the 1996 elections, and, together with
relevant amendments to the Basic Law:
The Knesset and the Knesset Election
Law, inaugurated a new electoral system in Israel. For the first time, two
separate ballots were cast, simultaneously: one for the political party
chosen by the voter to represent him/her in the Knesset, and the other for
prime minister.
Elections to the Knesset remain virtually unchanged. Parties
represented in the outgoing Knesset can automatically stand for
re-election; other parties may present their candidacy by obtaining
the signatures of 2,500 eligible voters, officially registering as a
party, and depositing a bond, which is refunded if they win at least
one Knesset seat.
Each party presents its platform and list of candidates for the
Knesset, in order of precedence. The different parties select their
candidate list by various methods, whether primaries (among
registered party members) or selection by a party committee or other
body.
Voter Eligibility
All citizens aged 18 or older on election day are eligible to vote,
and a voter registry is prepared and published before the
election.
Election day is a holiday in order to enable all to participate.
Soldiers and policemen on active duty vote in special polling
stations in their units. Special arrangements have also been made for
prison inmates to vote, as well as for those confined to hospital.
Israeli law does not provide for absentee ballots, and voting takes
place only on Israeli soil. The sole exceptions are official Israeli
envoys serving in missions abroad, and members of the Israeli
merchant marine.
On January 31, 1999, the Ministry of the Interior placed the
register of voters on public display, and announcements were
published in the Israeli press, informing the public that
toll-free phone lines were open to those who wish to confirm,
correct or add to the information appearing therein.
The register is open for public inspection by telephone until
February 12, and corrections can be requested until February 14.
If the request is not granted, an appeal may be filed before the
District Court until March 7. Court fees are waived for such an
appeal.
The register contains the names of all eligible voters (citizens
who were born no later than June 4, 1981), their address,
assigned polling station and its location. The register contains
the names of 4,496,515 voters, of whom approximately 673,000
appear for the first time - 493,000 voters who have turned 18
since the last election, and 180,000 new immigrants.
Eligibility Requirements for Knesset Candidates
Every Israel national who on the day of the admission of a candidates
list containing his name is 21 of age or over shall have the right to
be elected to the Knesset.
However, any individual who has been sentenced to imprisonment for a
term of five years or more for an offense against the security of the
state and five years have not yet passed since the day when he
terminated his period of imprisonment, may not become a candidate for
the Knesset.
Where an Israeli citizen is also a citizen of another state, and the
law of that state enables his release from its nationality, he cannot
be a candidate for the Knesset unless, by the time of the submission
of the candidates' list including his name and to the satisfaction of
the chairman of the Knesset Central Elections Committee, he has done
everything required on his part to be released or that additional
citizenship.
In addition, the law specifies that following senior officials cannot
not be candidates for the Knesset:
(1) the President of the State;
(2) the two Chief Rabbis;
(3) a judge (Heb: shofet), so long as he holds office;
(4) a judge (Heb: dayan) of a religious court, so long as he
holds office;
(5) the State Comptroller;
(6) the Chief of the General Staff of the Israel Defense
Forces;
(7) rabbis and ministers of other religions while holding office
for a remuneration.
(8) senior civil service employees and senior army officers
(four highest grades)
According to the Basic Law: The Knesset, the Central Elections
Committee may prevent a candidates' list from participating in
elections if its objectives or actions, expressly or by implication,
include one of the following:
negation of the existence of the State of Israel as the state of
the Jewish people;
negation of the democratic character of the
State;
incitement to racism.
Eligibility Requirements for Prime Minister
Since the change of the electoral system in 1996, Israel's prime
minister is elected by a separate, direct ballot. The ballot is of a
different color, and lists only the candidate's name.
The candidate for prime minister may be nominated by:
a party, or parties, with at least 10 seats in the outgoing Knesset
50,000 enfranchised persons
The candidate must be a citizen at least 30 years of age, and head
his/her party's list of candidates for the Knesset.
If the outgoing prime minister has served for seven consecutive
years, he/she may not stand for re-election.
The Prime Ministerial Race: Meet the Candidates
A number of candidates declared their intention to run
for the office of Prime Minister. Below are the official biographies
of some of the more prominent contenders. (Note: Bios provided by
the offices of the candidates.)
Benjamin Netanyahu, incumbent Prime Minister (Likud)
Ehud Barak, MK (One Israel)
Ze'ev Benjamin Begin, MK (National Unity) - WITHDRAWN FROM THE RACE
Azmi Bishara, MK (NDA) - WITHDRAWN FROM THE RACE
Yitzhak Mordechai, MK (Center) - WITHDRAWN FROM THE RACE
Registration of Parties
In order for a party to present candidates for election to the
Knesset it must be registered as a political party with the
Party Registrar, a statutory official who carries out his duties
in accordance with the relevant legislation.
Any group of at least one hundred individuals, who wish to
register themselves as a political party, must present the
registrar with the following:
an official registration request, as required by law,
the party's rules of association, as prescribed by law,
affidavits providing the requisite details for each of the one
hundred registrants (name, address, declaration of intent to
register, etc.),
documentation from the Ministry of Interior demonstrating the
Israeli citizenship of the registrants,
and registration fees and related expenses totalling about
50,000 NIS (approximately $12,500).
New parties wishing to participate in the upcoming Israeli
elections were required to submit their registrations by February 10, 1999 in order to guarantee completion of the registration process by March 30.
In the 90 days preceding the elections, any two Knesset members from the same party can leave it and set up an independent list. The new list is then eligible for NIS 800,000 in government election funds and nine minutes of TV advertising
time per MK. The splits and forming of new factions can continue until March
29, when the final list of parties running in the elections is submitted to the Central Election Committee.
Parties registered and pending registration
(February 10, 1999).
On April 23, 1999, the Central Elections Committee published the list of 33 parties which will run in the May elections:
(ordered by their alphabetical order in Hebrew)
National Unity (HaIchud HaLeumi)
National Democratic Alliance (Al-Tajammu' Al-Watani Al-Democrati)
Democratic Action Organization (Daam)
The Third Way
Democratic Front for Peace and Equality (Hadash)
United Torah Judaism
Israel Green Party (HaYerukim)
One Israel
Yisrael Ba'aliyah
Power for Pensioners (Koah LaGimlaim)
Lev - Immigrants for Israel
Likud
Tradition of the Fathers (Moreshet Avot)
Jewish Leadership for Israel (withdrawn from the race)
National Religious Party
The Center Party
The Progressive Center Party (for Romanian immigrants)
Men's Family Rights
The Natural Law Party
The Negev Party
The Casino Party
Meretz - Democratic Israel
The Green Leaf Party
One Nation - for Israeli Workers and Pensioners
The New Arab Party
Pnina Rosenblum
Tzomet - The Movement for Renewed Zionism
Voice of the Environment (withdrawn from the race)
United Arab List
Shinui
Shas
Hope (Tikva)
List of Candidates for the 15th Knesset
(Names of candidates as published by the Government Press Office)
LIKUD
1. Benjamin Netanyahu 2. Silvan Shalom 3. Moshe Katzav
4. Limor Livnat 5. Meir Sheetrit 6. Gideon Ezra
7. Naomi Blumental 8. Ariel Sharon 9. Uzi Landau
10. Reuven Rivlin 11. Danny Naveh 12. Tzahi Hanegbi
13. Yisrael Katz 14. Michael Eitan 15. Joshua Matza
16. Moshe Arens 17. Avraham Hirschson 18. Tzipi Livni
19. Ayoub Kara 20. Yuval Steinitz 21. Ze'ev Boim
22. Shaul Amor 23. Eli Cohen 24. Ze'ev Geyzel
25. Gila Gamliel 26. Gilad Arden 27. David Mena
28. Avi Ben-Avraham 29. Liat Rabner 30. Yosef Ahimeir
31. Michael Ratzon 32. Doron Shmueli 33. Assad Assad
34. Zahava Koren 35. Yehiel Hazan
ONE ISRAEL - Labor, Gesher, Meimad
1. Ehud Barak 2. Shimon Peres 3. David Levy
4. Shlomo Ben-Ami 5. Yosef Beilin 6. Matan Vilnai
7. Avraham Burg 8. Ra'anan Cohen 9. Uzi Baram
10. Dalia Itzik 11. Benjamin Ben-Eliezer 12. Haim Ramon
13. Elie Goldschmidt 14. Avraham Shohat 15. Yael Dayan
16. Ofir Pines-Paz 17. Michael Melchior 18. Maxim Levy
19. Ephraim Sneh 20. Nawaf Massalha 21. Avraham Yehezkel
22. Sofa Landver 23. Salah Tarif 24. Shalom Simchon
25. Yossi Katz 26. Shiri Weizman 27. Eli Ben-Menachem
28. Collette Avital 29. Mordechai Mishani 30. Ephraim Oshaya
31. Micha Goldman 32. Eitan Cabel 33. Yehuda Gilad
34. Orit Noked 35. Tzali Reshef
CASINO PARTY
1. Ezra Tissona 2. Nissim Farjoun 3. Ron Feldman
CENTER PARTY
1. Yitzhak Mordechai 2. Amnon Lipkin-Shahak 3. Dan Meridor
4. Roni Milo 5. Uriel Savir 6. Dalia Pelossof
7. Nehama Ronen 8. David Magen 9. Yehiel Lasry
10. Haggai Merom 11. Svetlana Alexandrova 12. Benny Biton
13. Manuela Dviri 14. Eran Weintraub 15. Shmuel Slavin
DEMOCRACTIC ACTION ORGANIZATION - DAAM
1. Samia Khatib 2. Wahaba Badarna 3. Asma Agbaria
4. Assaf Adiv 5. Abd al-Majid Hussein 6. Michal Ben-Efrat
DEMOCRATIC FRONT FOR PEACE AND EQUALITY - HADASH
1. Mohammed Baraka 2. Issam Mahoul 3. Tamar Gozansky
4. Afou Agbaria 5. Walid Fahoum 6. Yosef Assouna
GREEN LEAF PARTY
1. Boaz Wachtal 2. Shlomo Lavi 3. Gabriel Levy
HOPE (TIKVA)
1. Alexander Sentzer 2. Richislav Primsler 3. Simeon Shapiro
ISRAEL B'ALIYAH
1. Natan Sharansky 2. Yuli Edelstein 3. Roman Bronfman
4. Marina Solodkin 5. Gennady Rieger 6. Alexander Tzinker
7. Natalia Yellinson 8. Shlomo Mula 9. Yonatan Mishayev
10. Vuba Bitau
ISRAEL BEITENU (Israel Our Home)
1. Avigdor Lieberman 2. Yuri Stern 3. Michael Nudleman
4. Eliezer Cohen 5. Esterina Tartman 6. Uri Ahonov
ISRAEL GREEN PARTY
1. David Zucker 2. Pe'er Wisner 3. Irit Rosenblum
JEWISH LEADERSHIP FOR ISRAEL - Withdrawn from the race
1. Mordechai Karpel 2. Moshe Feiglin
LEV - IMMIGRANTS FOR ISRAEL
1. Ovadia Pesachov 2. Yehoshua Leib 3. Goram Harazi
MEN'S RIGHTS IN THE FAMILY - RAASH
1. Ya'akov Schlusser 2. Herzl Rotem 3. Dan Sarenga
MERETZ - DEMOCRATIC ISRAEL
1. Yosef Sarid 2. Ran Cohen 3. Haim Oron
4. Amnon Rubinstein 5. Anat Maor 6. Zahava Gal-On
7. Avshalom Vilan 8. Ilan Gillon 9. Naomi Hazan
10. Hussiena Jabara 11. Moshe Raz 12. Benjamin Temkin
13. Uzi Even 14. Michal Shohat 15. Ali al-Assad
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE
1. Azmi Bishara 2. Ahmed Tibi 3. Jamal Zahalka
4. Said Nafa'a 5. Ahmed Nasser 6. Muhammad Shalabi
NATIONAL RELIGIOUS PARTY
1. Yitzhak Levy 2. Haim Druckman 3. Shaul Yahalom
4. Yigal Bibi 5. Zevulun Orlev 6. Nahum Lagenthal
7. Nissan Slomiansky 8. Gila Finkelstein 9. Eliyahu Gabai
10. Shmaryahu Ben-Tzur 11. Asher Abergil 12. Yehudit Shilat
13. Rachel Sylvetzky 14. Mordechai Vaknin 15. Viva Sivan
NATIONAL UNITY - Moledet, Tekuma, Herut
1. Ze'ev Binyamin Begin 2. Rehavam Ze'evi 3. Hanan Porat
4. Michael Kleiner 5. Binyamin Alon 6. Zvi Hendel
7. Uri Ariel 8. Moshe Peled 9. Moshe Peretz
10. Reuven Felix
NATURAL LAW PARTY
1. Reuven Zilinkovsky 2. Dorit Goldschmidt 3. Daniel Glicker
NEGEV PARTY
1. Rina Ramot 2. Moshe Zaguri 3. Khalil Abu-Rabiya
THE NEW ARAB PARTY
1. Makram Mahoul 2. Samar Mavjish 3. Asma Abu-Wassal
ONE NATION - FOR ISRAELI WORKERS AND PENSIONERS
1. Amir Peretz 2. Haim Katz 3. Yoram Oberkovich
4. Addisu Messele 5. Shlomo Kfir 6. Nadia Hilo
PNINA ROSENBLUM
1. Pnina Rosenblum 2. Avraham Balashnikov 3. Masha Lubelsky
4. Galia Albin 5. Moshe Moskowitz 6. Edna Shani
POWER FOR PENSIONERS
1. Gideon Ben-Yisrael 2. Yaffa Golan 3. Avishai Lickerman
PROGRESSIVE CENTER PARTY
1. Adrian Yonovich 2. Yehuda Maor 3. Ivan Daniel
SHAS
1. Aryeh Deri 2. Aryeh Gamliel 3. Eliyahu Suissa
4. Eliyahu Yishai 5. Shlomo Benizri 6. Yitzhak Cohen
7. Amnon Cohen 8. Nissim Dahan 9. David Azoulai
10. David Tal 11. Yitzhak Vaknin 12. Rahamim Mellul
13. Meshulam Nahari 14. Yitzhak Saban 15. Nissim Ze'ev
SHINUI
1. Yosef Lapid 2. Avraham Poraz 3. Yehudit Naot
4. Yosef Paritzky 5. Eliezer Zandberg 6. Victor Breilovsky
THIRD WAY
1. Avigdor Kahalani 2. Eliyahu Malka 3. Yehuda Harel
4. Ehud Gross 5. Miriam David 6. Moshe Danon
TRADITION OF THE FATHERS
1. Yosef Ba-Gad 2. Moshe Kablan 3. Asher Eidan
TSOMET - THE MOVEMENT FOR RENEWED ZIONISM
1. Rafael Eitan 2. Haim Adini 3. Haim Dayan
4. Moshe Romem 5. Vered Sweid 6. Ya'akov Rosenwald
UNITED ARAB LIST
1. Abd al-Malik Dahamshe 2. Taleb a-Sana'a 3. Hashem Mahmeed
4. Tewfik Khatib 5. Muhammad Kena'an 6. Ibrahim al-Amor
UNITED TORAH JUDAISM
1. Meir Porush 2. Avraham Ravitz 3. Ya'akov Litzman
4. Moshe Gafni 5. Shmuel Halpert 6. Yisrael Eichler
7. Yehye Turgeman 8. Hanoch Werdiger 9. Aryeh Baumel
10. Avraham Nattar
VOICE OF THE ENVIRONMENT - Withdrawn from the race
1. Roni Kramer 2. David Klein 3. David Sugarman
Campaigning Regulations
On February 17, 1999 (90 days before the election), the election laws
regarding campaigning took effect. These regulations prohibit
campaign advertising from appearing on buses and lighted billboards.
In addition, the size of advertisements in the printed media is
limited, and the use of entertainment events or gifts to promote
candidates is also prohibited.
Election Finance: Background Information
Allocations to Parties
According to the Party Financing Law, a treasury allocation for
election campaigns is granted to each faction at the rate of one
pre-defined "financing unit" per seat won in the previous Knesset
elections plus one unit per mandate won in the current Knesset
elections, divided by two, plus one additional financing unit. New
factions receive a similar allocation, retroactively, based on the
number of seats won in the elections. A faction which receives more
than 1% of the valid votes cast in the Knesset election but not
enough to win a Knesset seat is entitled to one "financing unit" to
cover its election expenses. (The amount of one (1) Financing Unit
for the 1992 Knesset elections was 664,000 NIS.)
Every Faction is entitled to financing of:
1. Expenses incurred during the election campaign, and;
2. Ongoing expenses, on a month to month basis, beginning with the
month after the publication of the results of the Knesset elections
until the month of the publication of the next Knesset elections.
However, a faction comprising five (5) Members of the Knesset or less
may not expend more than ten (10) Financing Units for election
expenses. A Faction comprising more than (5) five Members of the
Knesset but less than ten (10) Members of the Knesset may not expend
more than twice the number of Financing Units per Member of Knesset
in the Faction. In addition, a faction comprising ten (10) or more
Members of the Knesset may not expend more than twice the the number
of Financing Units per the first ten Members of the Knesset in the
Faction and one and one half (1 1/2) the number of Financing Units
per each additional Knesset Member.
Public Campaign Contributions
No faction may receive a contribution, directly or indirectly, from
an individual (i.e. noncommercial entity), in excess of the sum of
five hundred (500) NIS from any person or his dependents. In an
election year, this sum shall be one thousand (1,000) NIS. (These
sums are linked to the Consumer Price Index.)
A faction or may not receive a loan, except from a banking
institution. Also, a faction may not receive any funding whatsoever
from a commercial entity, corporation or business partnership.
Finally, a faction may not receive a financial contribution from
someone who is not eligible to vote in the elections.
Auditing
The State Comptroller has the right to determine guidelines, for the
accountants of the factions, regarding the manner in which faction
accounts must be audited.
Every faction must submit to the Speaker of the Knesset its yearly
balance sheet and its yearly report of income and expenditures. These
documents made open to public examination by the Knesset Speaker.
Timetable
The following are the dates of selected political and electoral
milestones for the 1999 Israeli elections:
January 24: The Meretz Party Council chooses its panel of 27
Knesset candidates.
January 25: The Likud party conducted primary elections for
party leadership between incumbent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
and former Defense Minister and Foreign Minister Dr. Moshe Arens (Uzi
Landau has withdrawn his candidacy) by 170,000 registered Likud members.
February 7: 100 days prior to elections, senior civil servants
wishing to become candidates must resign their positions.
February 8: The Likud's list for the Knesset was chosen by the
2,700 members of the Likud Central Committee.
February 15: The Labour Party conducted primary elections for
its Knesset list, among the 163,000 registered party members (the
Labour candidate for Prime Minister, Ehud Barak, has already been
determined).
February 17: Restrictions on election campaigning went into effect.
March 30: Last day for submission of candidacy for prime minister
and Knesset (48 days prior to elections).
April 22: Central Elections Committee approves candidates (25 days
prior to elections).
May 5: Israeli envoys and seamen abroad cast their ballots (12 days
prior to elections).
May 17: Election day.
May 25: Publication of official results.
June 7: The 15th Knesset convenes.
Within 45 days of the publication of the election results, the prime minister-elect will present his/her list of ministers and basic policy guidelines before the Knesset.