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OPINION

Likud Should Ask for Our Forgiveness, Not Our Votes

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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Yonatan Sindel/Pool via AP

A year ago, I voted for a party other than Likud for only the second time since I moved to Israel.  Ideologically, for many reasons, Likud makes sense and is a comfortable political home. In addition, I believed in all the preceding elections that for many reasons, Prime Minister Netanyahu, Bibi, was the best choice to lead the country.

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A year ago, when the fourth successive election took place in about two years’ time, it became clear to me that despite all his strengths and accomplishments which I do not diminish, Bibi was playing us. Whether just to hang on to his political career, to avoid prosecution on some serious charges that have been brought against him, to undermine others, or any combination of these and other reasons, Bibi refused to bring a budget to a vote, unimaginably dragging Israel into two years without a state budget. In doing so, he not just broke his coalition agreement, but automatically triggered new elections. I still admire and respect Bibi for all he’s accomplished, but I was no longer prepared to vote for Likud under his leadership.  If there were an expiration date on him like a container of milk, he went sour long ago.

While the current government is not one I would have chosen to put together, I’m glad he’s no longer Prime Minister. I wish Likud would replace Bibi and let others come up into leadership, particularly those that he’s stifled and pushed aside for years, not coincidentally some of the best and brightest who he probably looks at as competition rather than those offering blind support.

Despite not loving the current government for many reasons, Bibi and Likud (along with much of the opposition which sadly and reflexively line up with Bibi) have not given me any reason to regret my vote a year ago.  The opposition should be about competing ideas and, yes, trying to win back support of the public to govern again.  This opposition under Bibi’s leadership has proven itself to be void of ideas and seems to only seek to undermine the sitting government, despite what may be good for Israel.

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This week, a law to provide scholarships to soldiers was passed, but not without gross political antics from Likud.  The shameful thing is that this is a law that could (and maybe should) very well have been enacted in the 12 years that Bibi was Prime Minister. Every Likud member should have reflexively supported it.  It never should have been a political vote, and for sure never should have been a vote about embarrassing or bringing down the government.

Tuesday morning, recordings aired of Likud members plotting to undermine the government through this vote. That’s simply shameful.  They actually articulated that they would rather use the soldiers as a pawn to bring down the government than to vote for a law that is and ought to be a national priority.  Did I mention that this is shameful?

Miri Regev, one of Bibi’s lapdog Likud Knesset members, is quoted as follows: “We decided as a party that we’re going to be a fighting opposition and that we want to bring down this government. So there are no stomachaches [when voting against] soldiers or battered women or cases of rape because we all understand that this is the rationale.”

I have always found Miri Regev to be spiteful and vapid. That in the previous government she was set to become our Foreign Minister as one of the must undiplomatic members of Knesset made a mockery of Likud’s internal selection process. The revelations this week have just added to my decision a year ago to bolt the Likud.  I’m not saying I am gone for good, and in a democratic party (one of the few that actually has internal primaries sometimes), there will be people elected who I like and respect more than others.  I can live with that.  But I no longer want to support a party with a man at its head who plays politics so much internally that it’s transparent that he has interests at heart other than the well being of the State.

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Maybe I’m naïve. That won’t be the worst thing I have ever been called.  I can live with that too.  But the party of Bibi and Miri is not one I can support. I pray that sound heads in Likud will make a change and give me reason to have confidence in my voting Likud again, someday. Until then, I’ll pray that the sitting government succeeds to the best of its ability and doesn’t mess up, and that we’ll be on a path of competing ideas, not using our soldiers as pawns or blaming the sitting government for deals and alliances that the Likud would have made just as easily.

When voting in Israel, we take a slip of paper with letters representing the party we want to elect and put it in an envelope to be tallied. The letters representing Likud are ???‎‎. Coincidentally, these letters are the root of the Hebrew word ?????‎‎ which means “forgiveness.” Rather than asking us to vote for them, the Likud should be asking for our forgiveness.

I’m ashamed for the Likud. I hope there’s some level of shame left among the adults still in the room.

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