by Dr. Haim Shine
Anyone who thinks that the New Right will help the mainstream Right in the April Knesset election is mistaken. Even a few lost seats could lead to the rise of a center-left coalition.
When  we pull back the curtain on the maneuvering that preceded former  Habayit Hayehudi leader Naftali Bennett and MK Ayelet Shaked leaving the  party, it turns out that we're not talking about a New Right but rather  old-fashioned politics.
Bennett picked up a political party  framework branded as Habayit Hayehudi (Jewish Home) at a bargain  basement price. The members of the party included veterans of the  Mizrachi religious-Zionist movement founded by Rabbi Yitzchak Yaacov  Reines in 1902; members of the historic National Religous Party; rabbis  and educators; and young idealists who were working to redeem land in  Israel. The point of acquiring an existing framework was to allow  Bennett and Shaked an exit as he headed for the role of defense minister  and then prime minister.
But the Israeli reality does not allow  someone to reach the prime ministership via a party that represents a  single sector. So the home was abandoned, leaving debts unpaid, and  millions of shekels in party funding was used to underwrite the split. A  defunct party (Tzalash) was purchased and some media figures were roped  into an attempt to persuade religious-Zionist leader Rabbi Haim Drukman  that the move by Bennett and Shaked was justified.
It is inappropriate to abandon a party  months before a general election, and particularly one that had rolled  out a red carpet for the people who are now leaving it.
Anyone who thinks or tries to convince  others that the New Right will help the Right succeed in the upcoming  election is mistaken or fooling others. There is no chance that  potential voters who would support the new parties recently established  for former IDF chiefs Benny Gantz or Moshe Ya'alon or MK Orly  Levy-Abekasis will move to the new party, since Bennett has branded  himself as more right-wing than the Likud. The people who support Gantz  and his friends want something new, so much so that Gantz's own opinions  are – confoundingly – of no interest to them.
Many citizens for whom it is important that  Israel remain whole remember similar trickery in the 1992 election.  Back then, too, there was a secular-religious party (Tehiya) that, with  various other right-wing parties in wreckage, helped bring down  then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. The result was the rise of the Left  and the eventual signing of the Oslo Accords, which led to disaster.  It's a shame that the Right's self-destructive mechanism is once again  operating. Bennett, Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Lieberman, Kulanu  leader Moshe Kahlon, and Aryeh Deri of Shas are now leading parties  mostly comprising voters on the Right, and some of their parties might  not pass the minimum electoral threshold of 3.25%. We should also add  Shas official Eli Yishai and the far-right Zehut and Otzma Yehudit  parties, both of which could cause the mainstream Right to lose votes.
My feeling is that many of the polls coming  out now are groundless and designed to hurt the Right's chances of  winning the April election. Left-wing pollsters, using Internet surveys,  have an interest in lulling right-wing voters into a false sense of  security by presenting a victory by the Right as a certainty, meaning  that they'd have no reason not to vote for the marginal little parties.  The pollsters also want to bolster the New Right and cause infighting  among the right wing, prompting Bennett to go after Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu and the Likud. Experience has taught us that we  cannot rule out the possibility that Bennett or Lieberman would lend  their hand to the establishment of a center-left coalition in exchange  for the job of defense minister.
Given everything that is happening, the  leadership of the Right must band together to minimize damage. They must  build a single strong, united bloc against the Left. If the Right loses  three seats in the game of thrones, it could anoint the Left, and in  that case, the right-wing voters would have no one to blame but  themselves.
Dr. Haim Shine
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/build-a-united-bloc-against-the-left/
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