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Opinion

If only we could elect a leader who does not need a coalition

December 6, 2012 13:54
3 min read

During the recent Gaza conflict, the sky above our village in northern Israel was eerily quiet. But, immediately after the ceasefire, Israeli fighter jets began passing overhead several times a day. You don’t hear them coming until suddenly they are slashing the sky, low and fast, like a new kind of thunder.

It’s the post-war jitters. Russian naval ships stand opposite the Israeli shore, US Patriot missiles are ready near the Turkish-Syria border, a showdown with Iran seems inevitable — and on top of all that, there are the upcoming elections.

Two Jews, three opinions. Two Israelis, three political parties. Or so it seems, even more so now than at the last elections in 2009. These days, almost every constituency has its own party to lobby for its own special interests.

While it is important that Israel’s minority factions are represented in the Knesset, do we really need a party for retirees or for the legalising of marijuana? Israel would be better off having a system in which a politician is elected as leader of the government and then governs, rather than having to scramble to form a coalition.