Elections in Israel

Ballot slips used in Israeli elections
Josef Tal voting with the assistance of his granddaughter, 2003 elections
Israeli poll booth

Elections in Israel are based on nationwide proportional representation. The electoral threshold is currently set at 3.25%, with the number of seats a party receives in the Knesset being proportional to the number of votes it receives.[1][2] The Knesset is elected for a four-year term, although most governments have not served a full term and early elections are a frequent occurrence. Israel has a multi-party system based on coalition governments as no party has ever won a majority of seats in a national election, although the Alignment briefly held a majority following its formation by an alliance of several different parties prior to the 1969 elections. The legal voting age for Israeli citizens is 18. Elections are overseen by the Central Elections Committee and are held according to the Knesset Elections Law.

Electoral procedure

National elections for the Knesset must take place once every four years, though early elections have occurred more often and few governments have reached the four year limit.[3] Early elections can be called by a vote of the majority of Knesset members, or by an edict of the President, and normally occur on occasions of political stalemate and of the inability of the government to get the parliament's support for its policies. Failure to get the annual budget bill approved by the Knesset by March 31 (3 months after the start of the fiscal year) also leads automatically to early elections.

Israel uses the closed-list method of party-list proportional representation;[4] thus citizens vote for their preferred party and not for any individual candidates. The 120 seats in the Knesset are then assigned (using the D'Hondt method) proportionally to each party that received votes, provided that the party gained votes which met or exceeded the electoral threshold.[4] Parties are permitted to form electoral alliances so as to gain enough collective votes to meet the threshold (the alliance as a whole must meet the threshold, not the individual parties) and thus be allocated seats. The low threshold makes the Israeli electoral system more favourable to minor parties than systems used in most other countries. Two parties can make an agreement so that both parties' sum of surplus votes are combined, and if the combined surplus votes amount to an extra seat, the extra seat goes to the party with the greater number of surplus votes.[5]

Any Israeli citizen over 21 may be elected to the Knesset, except holders of several high positions in the civil service and officers or career soldiers (those should resign from their post before the elections), soldiers in compulsory service, and felons who were convicted and sentenced to prison terms exceeding three months (until seven years after their prison term expired).

The following people may not serve as a Member of Knesset (MK) due to their conflicting functions:[6]

  1. The President of the State of Israel
  2. The two Chief Rabbis of the State of Israel
  3. Any judge in the judicial system, so long as they still hold office
  4. Any dayan, or judge in the Rabbinical Court system, so long as they still hold office
  5. The State Comptroller
  6. Rabbis or Ministers of religions, while receiving salaries for such a position
  7. Senior state employees and senior army officers of such grades or ranks and in such functions as shall be determined by law

The following prevents a party from running a list in Knesset elections:[7]

  1. Negating the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish people
  2. Negating the democratic nature of the State
  3. Incitement to racism
  4. Support of armed struggle against the State of Israel

After an election, the President, following consultations with the elected party leaders, chooses the Knesset member most likely to have the ability to form a viable (coalition) government. While this typically is the leader of the party receiving the most seats, it is not required to be so. In the event a party wins 61 or more seats in an election, it can form a viable government without having to form a coalition. However, no party has ever won more than 56 seats in an election; thus, a coalition has always been required.[3] That member has up to 42 days to negotiate with the different parties, and then present his or her government to the Knesset for a vote of confidence. If the Knesset approves the proposed government (by a vote of at least 61 members), he or she becomes Prime Minister.

As the coalitions often prove highly unstable - given the number and diverse views of the political parties involved - parties (or portions thereof) quite commonly leave them. However, so long as the coalition has at least 61 members (and it is free to recruit from parties not originally in the coalition) it is entitled to remain in power. Such a case occurred with the 19th Knesset: Ehud Barak and four other members left the Labor in 2011 to form the Independence Party and continued their alignment with Likud, while the remaining eight Labor members remained with the party but left the coalition; after all the changes the Likud coalition retained the support of the minimum 61 members and so it remained in power. Once a coalition fails a motion of confidence it ceases to be in power, but has a prescribed time to form a new coalition, after which other parties can attempt to form one, before early elections must be called.

Former procedures

The electoral threshold for a party to be allocated a Knesset seat was only 1% until 1988; it was then raised to 1.5% and remained at that level until 2003, when it was again raised to 2%. On March 11, 2014, the Knesset approved a new law to raise the threshold to 3.25% (approximately 4 seats). (This law is set to take effect for the next election, for the 20th Knesset.)[8]

In 1992, in an attempt to produce more stable governments, Israel adopted a system of direct election of the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister was directly elected separately from the Knesset in 1996, 1999 and 2001. The direct election of the Prime Minister was abandoned after the 2001 election, having failed to produce more stable governments.

Voting method

Israel's voting method is simplified by the fact that voters vote for a political party and not specific candidates in a closed list system.

On election day, and upon entry to a polling station, the voter is given an official envelope, and shown to a voting booth.

Inside the booth is a tray of slips, one for each party. The slips are printed with the "ballot letters" of the party (between one and three Hebrew or Arabic letters), the full official name of the party, and sometimes a slogan in small print. Each party publicizes their letter prior to election day, with most election posters featuring them. As many political parties in Israel are known by their acronyms, several parties can spell out their name in two or three letters, and thus use their name as their ballot letters (e.g. Meretz and Hetz).

The voter chooses the relevant slip for their party, puts it in the envelope, seals it, and then places the envelope into the ballot box.

An Yisrael Beiteinu ballot letter from the 2009 election. The letter, lamed (ל, "L") is for party chairman Avigdor Lieberman.
A Shas party ballot, also from the 2009 election. The letters, shin-samech (שס, "Sh-S") is the spelling of the party's name.

Parties use the equivalent letters in both official languages, Arabic and Hebrew; for instance Kadima use כן (Kaph-Nun) in Hebrew and كن (also Kaph-Nun) in Arabic. Because the Arabic alphabet shares a common source with the Hebrew (the Aramaic alphabet), each Hebrew letter has a perfectly corresponding Arabic one, facilitating this system.

The system has the advantage of being simple to use for those with limited literacy. This is especially important in Israel where many new immigrants struggle with the language, especially reading and writing, as Hebrew uses a unique alphabet.

Each party must register its chosen letters with the Israeli Central Elections Committee, and certain letters are reserved. If a new party wishes to use letters from an older party, it must receive permission from that party. Example of reserved letters are Mem, Het and Lamedh for Likud and Shin and Samekh for Shas.

2009

The following (Hebrew) ballot letters were used in the 2009 election:

Party Ballot
letters
Notes Party Ballot
letters
Notes
Ahrayut נפ
نف
Lehem נר
نر
Ale Yarok קנ
قن
First two letters of cannabis Lev LaOlim ינ
ين
Balad ד
ض
Likud מחל
محل
"Forgive"
Brit Olam פי
في
Man's Rights in the Family Party פק
فق
Da'am ק
ق
New Movement-Meretz מרצ
مرص
Party name
Gil זך
زخ
"Pure" National Union ט
ط
The letter actually belongs to the Moledet party [9]
Green Movement-Meimad ה
ه
Or אר
ار
(The first and last letters of the party name)
Green Party רק
رق
"Only" Shas שס
شس
Party name
Hadash ו
و
The Jewish Home ב
ب
HaYisraelim ים
يم
Tzabar צי
صي
Holocaust survivors & Ale Yarok Alumni יק
يق
Tzomet ץ
ص
Kadima כן
كن
"Yes" United Arab List-Ta'al עם
عم
"People"/"Nation"
Koah HaKesef קפ
قف
United Torah Judaism ג
خ
Koah LeHashpi'a פ
ف
Yisrael Beiteinu ל
ل
L for Lieberman
Labour אמת
امت
"Truth" Yisrael HaMithadeshet נ
ن
N for Nudelman
LaZuz נץ
نص
Yisrael Hazaka חי
حي
"Alive"
Leader קץ
قص

2006

The following (Hebrew) ballot letters were used in the 2006 election:

Party Ballot
letters
Notes Party Ballot
letters
Notes
Ale Yarok קנ First two letters of Cannabis Lev LaOlim פז "Gold"
Arab National Party קפ Leader ף
Atid Ekhad זה Likud מחל "Forgive"
Balad ד Meretz-Yachad מרצ Party name
Brit Olam ה National Union-NRP טב "Good" (using Niqqud)
Gil זך "Pure" New Zionism צה
Green Party רק "Only" Organization for Democratic Action ק
Hadash ו Oz LaAniyim פכ
HaLev פץ Shas שס Party name
Herut – The National Movement נץ "Hawk" Shinui יש There is
Hetz חץ Party name Tafnit פ
Jewish National Front כ Tzomet כץ
Justice for All קז United Arab List-Ta'al עם "People"/"Nation"
Kadima כן "Yes" United Torah Judaism ג
Labour אמת "Truth" Yisrael Beiteinu ל L for Lieberman
Lekhem ז

Historical

The following ballot letters were used by historical parties or in previous elections:

Party Ballot
letters
Notes
Kach כך Party name
Rafi כא "A"-alike
Mapai א "A"/"One"
National Union In 1999 יט; in 2003 ל

2013 elections

Wikinews has related news: Israelis re-elect Netanyahu, centre-left rises
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Likud Yisrael Beiteinu885,05423.3431–11
Yesh Atid543,45814.3319New
Labor Party432,11811.3915+7
The Jewish Home345,9859.1212+9
Shas331,8688.7511+1
United Torah Judaism195,8925.167+2
Hatnuah189,1674.996New
Meretz172,4034.556+3
United Arab List138,4503.6540
Hadash113,4392.9940
Balad97,0302.5630
Kadima79,0812.092–26
Otzma LeYisrael66,7751.760New
Am Shalem45,6901.200-1
Ale Yarok43,7341.1500
Eretz Hadasha28,0800.740New
Koah Lehashpi'a28,0490.7400
HaYisraelim18,9410.5000
The Greens and the Youth8,1170.2100
Dor5,9750.1600
Living with Dignity3,6400.100New
Da'am Workers Party3,5460.0900
We are Brothers2,8990.080New
Social Justice2,8770.080New
We are all Friends2,1760.060New
Pirate Party2,0760.050New
Economics Party1,9720.050New
Leader1,3520.0400
Or1,0270.0300
Brit Olam7610.0200
Hope for Change6490.020New
Moreshet Avot4610.010New
Invalid/blank votes40,904
Total3,833,646100120
Registered voters/turnout5,656,70567.78%
Source: Government of Israel
† Does not sum to zero because Independence (5 seats in the previous Knesset) and National Union (4 seats) did not participate in the elections.

2015 elections

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Likud985,40823.4030+12
Zionist Union786,31318.6724+3a
Joint List446,58310.6113+2b
Yesh Atid371,6028.8211–8
Kulanu315,3607.4910New
The Jewish Home283,9106.748–4
Shas241,6135.747–4
Yisrael Beiteinu214,9065.106–7
United Torah Judaism210,1434.996–1
Meretz165,5293.935–1
Yachad125,1582.970New
Ale Yarok47,1801.1200
Arab List4,3010.110New
The Greens2,9920.0700
We are all friends Na Nach2,4930.0600
U'Bizchutan1,8020.040New
Hope for Change1,3850.0300
Pirate Party of Israel8950.0200
Flower Party8230.020New
Brit Olam7610.0200
Or5020.0100
Living with Dignity4230.0100
Economy Party3370.0100
Democratura2420.010New
Social Leadership2230.0100
Invalid/blank votes43,854
Total4,254,738100120
Registered voters/turnout5,881,69672.34
Source: CEC

Turnout

Year Valid
Votes
Invalid
Votes
Total
Votes
Registered
Voters
Turnout
1949434,6845,411440,095--
1951687,4927,515695,007--
1955853,21922,969876,188--
1959969,33924,967994,306--
19611,006,96430,0661,037,030--
19651,206,72837,9781,244,706--
19691,367,74360,2381,427,981--
19731,566,85534,2431,601,098--
19771,747,87023,9061,771,776--
19811,920,12317,2431,937,366--
19842,073,32118,0812,091,402--
19882,283,12322,4442,305,567--
19922,616,84121,1022,637,9433,409,01577.4%
19963,052,13067,7023,119,8323,933,25079.3%
19993,309,41664,3323,373,7484,285,42878.7%
20033,148,36452,4093,200,773--
20063,137,06449,6753,186,7395,014,62263.5%
20093,373,49043,0973,416,5875,278,98564.7%
20133,792,74240,9043,833,6465,656,70567.8%
20154,209,46743,8694,253,3365,881,69672.36%

References

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