Will unity government follow Israeli vote? Looking to the morning after, Barak considers unity coalition
By David Landau
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
January 30, 2001
JERUSALEM With Ariel Sharon's victory in Israel's
election next week considered a foregone conclusion, political observers are
focusing instead on what will happen the morning after the vote.
Leftist political forces are resigned to the defeat of incumbent Prime
Minister Ehud Barak and are debating two issues -- whether to join a unity
government under Sharon and whether to dump Barak as Labor Party leader.
And on the far right, there are suspicions that a victorious Sharon would
ditch the hard-liners in favor of a union with Labor.
Underlying these speculations is the consensus view that, however wide
his margin of victory may be, Sharon will find it hard to cobble together a
sustainable rightist-religious coalition -- just as Barak found it hard to
sustain a
coalition of the left and center when his broader government fell apart in
July.
The Knesset arithmetic shows that even if religious and immigrant
parties join his coalition, Sharon will have a minority of the 120-member
Knesset behind him.
He will need the support of Center Party members Dan Meridor and
Roni Milo, and brothers David and Maxim Levy -- still nominally members of
Barak's One Israel bloc -- in order to create a working majority.
All four are onetime Likudniks who left the party to support Barak in
the May 1999 election.
Even if Sharon does form such a coalition, keeping it stable and
satisfied could consume most of his energy.
Most pundits predict that without a unity government, another round of
elections is almost inevitable this year.
In new elections, they say, former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
almost certainly would mount a challenge, and would be hard to defeat.
This explains Sharon's interest in the unity scenario -- and Barak's as
well, his protestations notwithstanding.
In addition, the pundits point to Sharon's need to present a relatively
moderate face to the world. This goal would be aided enormously by having
prominent Laborites at his side.
Sharon himself speaks as though a unity government is in the bag.
He says he will approach Barak the moment the exit polls are
announced, at 10 p.m. on Tuesday night.
Even if Labor balks, Sharon has pledged to establish a narrow
government and leave key portfolios open so that Barak and his party can join
at
a later date.
Plainly, the talk of unity is designed to appeal to the many centrist
voters who, though disillusioned with Barak, are still a little wary of
Sharon,
given the former general's hawkish image at home and abroad.
The Likud's own unpublished polls indicate that the unity card is the
strongest in their candidate's hand, and his strategic advisers are urging
him to
lay it down.
To counter this strategy, some in the Barak camp have urged their man
to make it clear that he is not prepared to enter a unity government under
Sharon.
They argue that as long as people believe the Likud line -- that unity is
the likely or even inevitable outcome of the election -- they will vote for
Sharon,
believing he will have Barak beside him at the Cabinet table.
Barak's strategists argue that if Barak can convince voters he won't join
Sharon, they may end up supporting Barak, albeit reluctantly.
A leading proponent of this strategy is Yossi Sarid, leader of the
liberal
Meretz Party and Barak's closest political ally at the moment.
This week he publicly challenged Barak to reject the unity scenario.
Barak issued a statement saying he would never serve in an
``Aswan-Tehran'' government. This was a reference to threats voiced earlier by
Avigdor Lieberman of the far-right to bomb Egypt's Aswan Dam and Tehran,
the Iranian capital, in response to violence.
However, Barak's wording only heightened suspicions both in his own
camp and among the opposition.
One interpretation is that while Labor would not sit in a government
with the far right, it might sit with the more moderate Likud.
Clarifications later in the week went a bit further, but the feeling
lingered that Barak and Sharon have an understanding, whether articulated or
unspoken, that the election winner will invite the loser into a unity
government.
Seasoned observers say Sharon and Barak may move fast to outflank
Labor opponents of unity by offering a senior portfolio to the party's senior
statesman, Shimon Peres.
The reasoning is that other peaceniks like Justice Minister Yossi Beilin
or Knesset Speaker Avraham Burg could hardly call for a split in the party to
protest the unity government if Peres, champion of the peacemakers, were there
alongside Barak.
In addition, these observers note, perhaps the surest way for a defeated
Barak to head off a move to oust him from Labor's helm would be to lead his
people quickly into a unity government, with some top posts reserved for Labor
officials.
Well-placed Likud sources say Sharon is ready to offer Labor six
ministries, two deputy ministries, and at least two chairmanships of Knesset
committees.
Of course, the argument for joining the government would not be
couched in terms of the power Labor would have.
Rather, Barak would argue that it is the responsible course in order to
moderate the Likud-led government and to ensure, by Labor's presence in the
inner sanctums, that Sharon does not embark on any rash military adventures.
Despite the cogency of this argument -- and the attraction of keeping a
slice of power -- key Laborites are preparing to fight any move toward unity.
Beilin and legislator Uzi Baram likely will be in the forefront of the
opponents. Interior Minister Haim Ramon probably will be there too, especially
if confronting Barak on unity could become part of a broader effort to depose
the
defeated prime minister.
Ramon makes no secret of his desire to seek his party leadership if
Barak loses the election.
But Ramon faces a problem: Burg, his close friend and ally, also
fancies himself a leadership contender and prime ministerial hopeful, and both
draw their support from the same dovish elements in the party.
They would destroy their chances if both ran against Barak.
Even before next week's election, talks already are under way between
the two men and their close aides to work out a way of determining which would
run against Barak in a Labor primary, insiders say.
Barak's aides cite the party constitution, which specifies that primaries
mus
t take place 14 months after a general election.
But political observers believe that if Barak loses badly, and does not
quickly bring Labor into a unity government, the upheaval will come much
sooner.