Jewish
State law: 'Netanyahu is leading to a bi-national state'
Prime minister's intention to promote legislation to enshrine
Israel's status as the nation-state of the Jewish people causes political and
public stir.
The prime minister
announced his intention to introduce the new basic law at Independence Hall
in Tel Aviv - the site where David Ben-Gurion announced Israel's independence
on May 14, 1948.
Netanyahu's announcement has caused a
political and public stir.
Opposition head Isaac
Herzog (Labor) slammed the prime minister, saying that "unfortunately,
the national destruction from Netanyahu's midrash will cause the loss of the
Jewish majority and turn Israel to a bi-national state. This unfortunate fact
cannot be obscured by any law."
Herzog clarified that
"the Labor party vehemently supports Israel as a Jewish and democratic
state. Labor founded the country and its leaders wrote the Declaration of
Independence, a constitutive document that enshrines Israel's nature as a
Jewish state."
Earlier, Netanyahu
said that he found it "astonishing that among those who call on Israel
to make concessions in Judea and Samaria due to the self-evident desire to
avoid a binational state, there are those who oppose defining the State of
Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish People."
"One cannot favor
the establishment of a Palestinian nation-state in order to maintain the
Jewish character of the State of Israel and – at the same time – oppose
recognizing that the State of Israel is the nation-state of the Jewish
People," the prime minister added.
Meretz leader Zehava
Gal-On also criticized Netanyahu's proposed legislation, saying it is "a
declarative and unnecessary law that won't help Israel remain the Jewish
state, as long as Netanyahu and his partners in the government are doing
everything to cultivate the territories and to turn us to an oppressive
bi-national state, that is neither Jewish nor democratic."
Netanyahu's desire to
push this legislation could lead to rifts within his government as well.
Harsh criticism came from the coalition as well.
Justice Minister Tzipi
Livni already stated she will oppose Netanyahu's initiative.
"I will continue protecting Israel's
values as a Jewish and democratic state and in no way will we allow (anyone)
to weaken the democratic values and surrender them to the Jewish ones - this
is the very essence of the Declaration of Independence and this is the basis
of our existence," she wrote on her Facebook page.
"To that end, and in line with the prime
minister and coalition's views, I've appointed Prof. Ruth Gavison several
months ago to closely examine the issue and to write an appropriate bill
proposal that will maintain the vital balance of Israel as a Jewish and
democratic state," she added.
Coalition chairman MK
Yariv Levin, however, welcomed Netanyahu's decision to promote the
legislation and called this "a historic decision that will put Israel
back on a Zionist path, after years of continuous blows by the legal system
against the basic principles the country was founded on."
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