Israeli Liberal Party

{{use dmy dates|date=June 2015}}

{{Infobox political party

| colorcode = {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}

| native_name = {{Script/Hebrew|המפלגה הליברלית הישראלית}}

| logo = Libralit-Logo.svg

| leader1_name = Pinchas Rosen {{small|(1961−65)}}
Peretz Bernstein {{small|(1961−65)}}
Yosef Serlin {{small|(1965−71)}}
Yosef Sapir {{small|(1965−72)}}
Elimelekh Rimalt {{small|(1971−75)}}
Simha Erlich {{small|(1976−83)}}
Pinchas Goldstein {{small|(1983−88)}}

| leader1_title = Chairperson

| foundation = {{Start date|1961|5|8|df=y}}

| dissolution = {{End date|1988}}

| merger = General Zionists, Progressive Party

| merged = Likud

| headquarters = Tel Aviv, Israel

| ideology = Liberalism (Israeli){{cite book |url=http://www.fnst-jerusalem.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/dror_book.pdf |title=A Liberal Upheaval: From the General Zionists to the Liberal Party (pre-book dissertation) |author=Dror Zeigerman |publisher=Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Liberty |date=2013 |url-status=usurped |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402102632/http://www.fnst-jerusalem.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/dror_book.pdf |archivedate=2 April 2015 |df=dmy-all }}

| position = Centre to centre-right{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v1qgyVMq4mcC&pg=PA169 |title=Israel: The Embattled Ally |author=Nadav Safran |publisher=Harvard University Press |date=1981 |page=169|isbn=9780674043039 }}

| national = Gahal {{small|(1965−1973)}}
Likud {{small|(1973−1988)}}

| international = Liberal International

| colours = {{Color box|{{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}|border=darkgray}} Gold

| symbol = 20px

| country = Israel

| seats1_title = Most MKs

| seats1 = {{nowrap|18 (1981)}}

| seats2_title = {{nowrap|Fewest MKs}}

| seats2 = 11 (1965, 1969)

}}

The Israeli Liberal Party ({{langx|he|המפלגה הליברלית הישראלית|Miflaga Libralit Yisraelit}}), also known as the Liberal Party in Israel ({{langx|he|המפלגה הליברלית בישראל}}, Miflaga Libralit BeYisrael) was a political party in Israel and one of the forerunners of the modern-day Likud. The party was created by a 1961 merger between the centrist Progressive Party and the General Zionists, forming a right-leaning, middle class-based party.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rdoR9qnEIKUC&pg=PA328 |title=Israel: Pluralism and Conflict |author= Sammy Smooha |publisher=University of California Press |date=1978 |page=328|isbn=9780520027220 }}[http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/israel/il_appnb.html Appendix B -- Israel: Political Parties and Organizations] The Progressives soon seceded to form the Independent Liberals in 1964.

History

File:Liberal2.png

File:Liberal5.png

The Liberal Party had its roots in the General Zionists, centrists who sought to unify all Zionists without regard to socialist, revisionist, or religious leanings, and stressed industrial development and private enterprise. The group split into two wings in 1935: the majority, General Zionists A, led by Chaim Weizman, were on the left; General Zionists B were on the right. Both were made up of industrialists, merchants, landlords, white-collar professionals, and intellectuals. They merged again in 1946 to form the General Zionist party, but split again in 1948 when group A helped form the Progressive Party.{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mf-xAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA298 |title=Historical Dictionary of Israel |last1=Reich |first1=Bernard |last2=Goldberg |first2=David H. |publisher=Scarecrow Press |year= 2008 |pages=109–10, 298|isbn=9780810864030 }}

The Liberal Party was formed on 8 May 1961, towards the end of the fourth Knesset when the two parties merged again, together holding 14 Knesset seats. Early elections were called for 1961 after the General Zionists and Herut brought a motion of no-confidence in the government over the Lavon Affair. In the 1961 elections the party won 17 seats, the same number as Herut, making it the joint-second largest after David Ben-Gurion's Mapai.

Early in 1964, spontaneous appeals arose among centrists and rightists of all factions for a joint parliamentary bloc to undermine Mapai's dominance.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0X4BAAAAQBAJ&pg=PT934 |title=A History of Israel: From the Rise of Zionism to Our Time |author=Howard M. Sachar |publisher=Random House |date=2013 |page=934|isbn=9780804150491 }} In 1965 the party held discussions with Menachem Begin's Herut party over a possible merger. A majority of the Liberals and Herut quickly approved the scheme, but some MKs, representing almost all the Progressive wing, declined to join the new alliance as they found Herut to be too militant. Seven mostly former Progressive Party MKs led by Pinchas Rosen broke away in protest to form the Independent Liberals on 16 March 1965. On 25 May 1965, the Liberal Party merged with Herut to form Gahal, a Hebrew acronym for Herut–Liberals Bloc (Hebrew: גוש חרות–ליברלים, Gush Herut–Libralim), though the two parties continued to function as independent factions within the alliance.

The formation of Gahal was a major turning point in Israeli politics, as it marked the first serious challenge to Mapai's hegemony. By the end of the Knesset session Gahal had 27 seats, only seven less than Mapai's 34 (reduced from 42 after 8 MKs, led by Ben-Gurion, had broken away to form Rafi).

Prior to the 1973 elections, Gahal merged with a number of small right-wing parties including the Free Centre (a breakaway from Gahal), the National List and the non-parliamentary Movement for Greater Israel to form the Likud bloc. The new party made history when it removed the left wing from power by winning the 1977 elections. The Liberal Party finally ceased to exist in 1988 when Likud became a unitary party.

In 1986, prominent Liberal Party leaders (none of whom were in the Knesset) who opposed joining the Likud established a party called the Liberal Center, accusing the present leadership of abandoning the party's traditional policies in order to accommodate Herut. The party was moderate in foreign policy; at the time it supported giving up of parts of the West Bank to Jordan in a peace treaty. It had a right-of-center approach to economic and social policies.{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/16/world/around-the-world-liberal-leaders-in-israel-establish-a-new-party.html |title=Liberal Leaders in Israel Establish a New Party |newspaper=The New York Times |date=January 16, 1986}} In 1988, along with the Independent Liberals, it joined Shinui, forming the Center–Shinui Movement. The new bloc supported land for peace with the Arabs and the protection of individual rights, and opposed religious coercion. It was openly against joining a government led by Likud and the religious parties. It also differed from Labor in its support for a free-market economy.

Today, a remnant of the Liberal Party, the Israeli Liberal Group, remains an active member of Liberal International,{{cite news |url=http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/LI-chief-tells-PM-to-build-ties-with-Syrian-rebels |title= LI chief tells PM to build ties with Syrian rebels |author=Gil Hoffman |newspaper=The Jerusalem Post |date=2012-01-05}} which it joined in 1990.{{Cite web |url=http://www.liberal-international.org/editorial.asp?ia_id=751 |title=Israeli Liberal Group - Israel |access-date=4 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131005032957/http://www.liberal-international.org/editorial.asp?ia_id=751 |archive-date=5 October 2013 |url-status=dead }}

Elected MKs in the Fifth Knesset

{{Color box|{{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}|border=darkgray}} – Progressive {{Color box|{{party color|General Zionists}}|border=darkgray}} – General Zionists

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

! colspan="2" | Name

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |1

| Pinchas Rosen

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |2

| Peretz Bernstein

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |3

| Yosef Sapir

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |4

| Moshe Kol

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |5

| Yizhar Harari

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |6

| Yosef Serlin

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |7

| Elimelekh Rimalt

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |8

| Idov Cohen

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |9

| Ezra Ichilov

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |10

| Yitzhak Klinghoffer

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |11

| Shimon Kanovitch

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |12

| Yitzhak Golan

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |13

| Rachel Cohen-Kagan

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |14

| Zvi Zimmerman

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |15

| Yehuda Sha'ari

|-

| style="background: {{party color|General Zionists}}; color: white" |16

| Zalman Abramov

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Progressive Party (Israel)}}; color: white" |17

| Baruch Uziel

|-

|}

Leaders

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

! colspan="3" |Leader

! Took office

! Left office

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 1

|File:Pinchas Rosen.jpg

| Pinchas Rosen

| 1961

| 1965

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 2

|File:Peretz Bernstein.jpg

| Peretz Bernstein

| 1961

| 1965

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 3

|File:Yosef Serlin.jpg

| Yosef Serlin

| 1965

| 1971

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 4

|File:Yosef Sapir. D711-104.jpg

| Yosef Sapir

| 1971

| 1972

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 5

|File:ELIMELECH RIMALT 1969.jpg

| Elimelekh Rimalt

| 1971

| 1975

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 6

|File:Simha Erlich, D627-072.jpg

| Simha Erlich

| 1975

| 1983

|-

| style="background: {{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}; color: white" | 7

|File:Pinchas Goldstein (00370630).jpg

| Pinchas Goldstein

| 1983

| 1988

|-

|}

Election results

{| class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Election

!Votes

!%

!Seats

!+/–

!Leader

|-

| 1961

| 137,255 (#3)

| 13.6

| {{Composition bar|17|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| –

| Pinchas Rosen
Peretz Bernstein

|-

| 1965

| colspan=2|Part of Gahal

| {{Composition bar|11|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{decrease}} 6

| Yosef Serlin

|-

| 1969

| colspan=2|Part of Gahal

| {{Composition bar|11|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{steady}} 0

| Yosef Serlin

|-

| 1973

| colspan=2|Part of Likud

| {{Composition bar|13|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{increase}} 2

| Elimelekh Rimalt

|-

| 1977

| colspan=2|Part of Likud

| {{Composition bar|15|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{increase}} 2

| Simcha Erlich

|-

| 1981

| colspan=2|Part of Likud

| {{Composition bar|18|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{increase}} 3

| Simcha Erlich

|-

| 1984

| colspan=2|Part of Likud

| {{Composition bar|14|120|hex={{party color|Liberal Party (Israel)}}}}

| {{decrease}} 4

| Pinchas Goldstein

|}

References

{{reflist}}

External links