Bread-and-butter issues carried the day in Tuesday’s Israeli elections, overshadowing nationalist fervor and slowing Israel’s shift to the right. Defying analysts’ expectations, voters handed surprisingly strong victories to an emerging centrist party, Yesh Atid, and the traditional center-left standard bearers in the Labor Party.
The two parties now hold the bulk of 60 seats carried by the center-left, equal to the 60 seats held by the bloc on the right.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conservative Likud-Beiteinu coalition still holds the most seats, but was stunned by its disappointing showing. Likud-Beiein retained just 31 seats—down from the 42 it held previously, and short of pre-election forecasts. The results bore out polling that found the economy was voters top issue, chosen over foreign policy by nearly a 3-to-1 margin. Recognizing that, center-left groups that traditionally promote negotiations with the Palestinians put the issue on the back burner and focused, instead, on the middle class, fair wages, fair taxes, and fair competition.
“Housing prices are through the roof,” former California congresswoman Jane Harman said on Tuesday on The Daily Rundown. “The left is very upset that extreme orthodox Jews are basically excused from the military and get enormous benefits that they don’t get. So there are tensions—religious, secular tensions and economic tensions —and (the campaign has) been about that.”









