by Ariel Bolstein
It appears Benny Gantz and his advisers are trying to recreate the electoral success Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak achieved in the 1990s through the branding of left-wing candidates as centrists.
Ever  since entering the political race, former IDF Chief of Staff Benny  Gantz's approach has been to blur the distinction between Right and  Left. The connections he has made and the alliances he has forged have  all been subject to this goal. It appears that Gantz and his advisers  recall the electoral success of Yitzhak Rabin in 1992 and Ehud Barak in  1999, achieved, among other things, thanks to the smart branding of  left-wing candidates as members of the center. But immediately upon  entering the Prime Minister's Office, both Rabin and Barak adopted the  policies of the Left.
Just like in the 1990s, this current  attempt to flaunt the centrist label is a sham. In Israeli politics,  there is no real Center because a majority of the issues and challenges  facing the Jewish state require a decisive choice between two  alternatives known as "Right" and "Left." When the time comes to make  major decisions, one cannot be a little on the Right or a little on the  Left, just as one cannot be "a little bit pregnant." So, for example, in  the ultimate test of the vote in the Knesset on the nation-state law,  Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid party chose to vote with the Left. Those who  oppose the declaration that our country is the state of the Jewish  people and that no other nation has collective national rights in  it belong on the Left regardless of how many times they succeeded in  throwing around the word "center" in a minute-long speech.
There are at least three other tests that  can help differentiate between Right and Left; two concern policies and  one political pragmatics. When taken together, Lapid and Gantz, now  allied in the Blue and White party, must necessarily be seen as being on  the Left.
The territorial integrity test: The Likud  and the nationalist camp support Israeli sovereignty between the Jordan  River and the Mediterranean Sea. Lapid and Gantz, however, foresee the  establishment of a Palestinian state and the expulsion of Jews from  their homes. At a time when the Right has drawn a clear conclusion from  the 2005 disengagement from the Gaza Strip – opposition to any future  eviction of Jews, Gantz and the Left support additional withdrawals. The  evacuation of settlements will be carried out as part of future  agreements, Miki Haimovich, a member of Gantz's Israel Resilience Party,  has promised us.
The economic test: Under the leadership of  Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel has come a long way from its  socialist past to its current thriving economy. While the Right aspires  to remove the remaining barriers that keep this from being a total  economic breakthrough, the economic Left and its satellites in the  Histadrut labor federation are interested in maintaining their power.  The decision to add Histadrut Chairman Avi Nissankoren and other members  of the economic Left to the party's list is a clear signal from Gantz  of his preferred alternative.
The political alliances test: All of the  right-wing parties have stated that they would recommend that the  president task Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with forming the next  government; all of the left-wing parties have just as adamantly said  they would task Gantz with the job.
The political map is divided into two  camps, Right and Left, according to a clear ideological key. The radical  Left, Meretz, for example, but even those further left, like the  communists and the Arab nationalist and Islamist parties, have embraced  the idea of forming a political alliance with Gantz. It seems they  understand full well just what is hiding behind the centrist mask.
Ariel Bolstein is the founder of the Israel advocacy organization Faces of Israel.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/leftists-in-disguise/
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