Independent Liberals (Israel)

The Independent Liberals (Hebrew: ליברלים עצמאיים, Libralim Atzma'im) were a political party in Israel between the 1960s and 1980s.

Independent Liberals

ליברלים עצמאיים
LeaderMoshe Kol
Gideon Hausner
Yitzhak Artzi
Founded16 March 1965
Dissolved1992
Split fromLiberal Party
Merged intoLabor Party
IdeologyLiberalism
Social liberalism[1][2]
Progressivism[1]
Secularism[3]
Political positionCenter
International affiliationLiberal International[4]
Most MKs7 (1965)
Fewest MKs1 (1977–1981;1984-1988)
Election symbol
לע

History

The Independent Liberals party was formed during the fifth Knesset in the aftermath of the merger of the Liberal Party and Herut. Seven of the 17 Liberal Party MKs led by former Minister of Justice, Pinchas Rosen, disagreed with the merger and founded a new party in response. Almost all of the dissenters were former members of the Progressive Party, which had merged with the General Zionists to create the Liberal Party during the fourth Knesset, and also included Rachel Cohen-Kagan, formerly an MK for WIZO.

The party agreed to have the Israeli participation in Liberal International shared equally with the Liberal Party.[5]

In their first electoral test, the 1965 elections, the Independent Liberals won 5 seats and joined Levi Eshkol and Golda Meir's coalition governments, with Moshe Kol appointed Minister of Tourism and Minister of Development. During the sixth Knesset they lost one seat when Yizhar Harari left the party to join the Alignment.

In the 1969 elections the party won four seats and were again included in Meir's coalition government. Kol retained his post as Minister of Tourism. The party also won four seats in the 1973 elections and were included in both of Meir and Yitzhak Rabin's coalition governments. Kol again retained his post as Minister of Tourism and Gideon Hausner was made a Minister without Portfolio. However, they lost one seat when Hillel Seidel defected to Likud.

The 1977 elections saw the party win only one seat, barely crossing the 1% electoral threshold (they received 1.3% of the vote). The party was also excluded from Menachem Begin's right-wing coalition. The 1981 elections saw the party fail to cross the electoral threshold and disappear from the Knesset. For the 1984 elections the party ran as a faction of the Alignment, with its leader Yitzhak Artzi given 44th place on the Alignment list.[4][6]

On March 15, 1988, near the end of the 11th Knesset, Artzi left the Alginment and joined the Shinui parliamentary group.[4][7][8] In the 1988 election, the Independent Liberals ran as part of the Center–Shinui Movement with Shinui and the Center Movement, but the combined list won only two seats and none were for Independent Liberal members.[9][10] The Independent Liberal party merged with the Labor Party in 1992.[9]

Election results

Election Leader Votes % Position Seats +/– Outcome
1965 Moshe Kol 45,299 3.75 6th
5 / 120
Coalition
1969 Moshe Kol 43,933 3.21 5th
4 / 120
1 Coalition
1973 Moshe Kol 56,560 3.61 5th
4 / 120
Coalition
1977 Gideon Hausner 20,384 1.17 13th
1 / 120
3 Opposition
1981 Yitzhak Artzi 11,764 0.61 12th
0 / 120
1 Extra-parliamentary
1984 Yitzhak Artzi 724,074
(as part of the Alignment)
34.9 1st
1 / 120
1 Coalition

References

  1. Goldstein, Amir (Spring 2011). ""We Have a Rendezvous With Destiny"—The Rise and Fall of the Liberal Alternative". Israel Studies. 16 (1): 27, 32, 47, 49. Thus, the PP continued to represent mostly white collar and government workers, intellectuals, and the labor intelligentsia, all of whom favored the social liberalism, broadly-based universal views, and social and religious pluralism that the party stood for.⁴(27); Kol wrote to Goldmann...: 'But the party must be founded on a clear ideological basis, and no such basis exists between our progressive humanistic liberalism and Herut.'²⁰(32); Kol emphasized that, 'The Herut Movement and social liberalism cannot dwell together in the same house.'(47); The PP, renamed the 'Independent Liberal Party,' resumed its progressive activity by trying to influence government policy—even if only marginally—from within the Labor camp, and affiliating itself with the ruling party.(49)
  2. "Translations on Near East and North Africa, No. 1635: Background to May 1977 General Elections". U.S. Joint Publications Research Service (68874): 13. 4 April 1977. The liberalism of Independent Liberals is in the spirit of the social humanism of the 20th Century.
  3. Ervin Birnbaum (1970). The Politics of Compromise: State and Religion in Israel. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 66. ISBN 08386 7567 0. The ILP is strongly secularist and is a staunch foe of religious encroachment and domination in the country.
  4. Encyclopedia Judaica. 9. 2007. p. 771. The Independent Liberal Party was affiliated with the Liberal International. In the elections to the Eleventh Knesset in 1984 the Independent Liberals ran within the Alignment list, and its representative, Yitzhak Arzi was elected. Towards the end of the Eleventh Knesset Arzi left the Alignment and joined the Shinui parliamentary group. Towards the end of the 1980s the Independent Liberals ceased to exist.
  5. Julie Smith (1997). A Sense of Liberty: The History of the Liberal International, 1847-1997. Liberal International. p. 45. Contacts with Israeli Liberals were complicated by domestic party divisions within the Israeli Party. LI had contacts with the Progressive Party and the General Zionist Party in the 1950s; a united Liberal Party was created in 1961 and joined LI. Then in 1965, following further domestic political change, the party split and the two offshoots, the Liberal Party (formerly the General Zionists) and the Independent Liberal Party (formerly Progressives), agreed that Israeli participation should be shared equally between them.
  6. "The Israeli Elections: 27 Parties of All Kinds Running (part 1 of a Series)". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1988-10-24.
  7. Mergers and Splits Among Parliamentary Groups
  8. Shmuel Sandler, M. Ben Mollov & Jonathan Rynhold, ed. (2005). Israel at the Polls, 2003. Routledge. p. 95. The Independent Liberal party survived as an independent party from 1965 until 1981; its representative participated in the Labour list in 1984; it formed together with Shinui the Shinui-Centre party in the 1988 elections, but did not succeed in winning a seat in the Knesset; and in 1992 it merged with the Labour party.
  9. Arthur S. Banks & Thomas C. Muller, ed. (1998). Political Handbook of the World: 1998. Springer. p. 458.
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