To avoid elections, Barak will rush into any coalition because he knows that the political lives of Labor party leaders are nasty, brutish and short. In the past seven years, Labor has had no less than six party chairmen (Barak, Benjamin Ben Eliezer, Amram Mitzna, Peres, Peretz and Barak again). In contrast, the Likud party and its ideological predecessors have had only four different chairmen in the last 60 years (Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir, Benjamin Netanyahu, Ariel Sharon, and Netanyahu again). Likud leaders survive electoral defeat (Begin lost eight elections before winning one). Labor leaders don’t. So a trouncing such as the one the polls predict for Labor would surely spell the end of Barak’s political career.
With Labor’s 19 seats cobined with his Kadima party’s 29, Mofaz would be close enough to the magic 61 he needs to form a coalition in Israel’s 120 seat Knesset. A number of smaller parties will get in line to sell themselves to Mofaz, who will be only too willing to buy the premiership.
The fly in Mofaz’s ointment would be if Livni decides not to play second fiddle any longer. Convinced that she could translate her broad public support into a general election victory by running at the head of a new party, she could potentially break away with other disgruntled members of Kadima and trigger new elections.
And what if the polls are right and Livni wins? Some of her advisors are arguing that rather than sully her hands and reputation with the dirty work of coalition building, she should use the momentum of a primary victory to propel her into the general elections.
At first glance, that strategy appears sound. Faced with the inevitable coalition demands of the likes of Shas, an ultraorthodox party that is as loved by its loyal followers as it is hated by everyone else, she could proclaim her refusal to “play the politics of the past” and head to a general election as the savior of what’s left of the country’s public norms. With Olmert’s scandals (the attorney general is to decide soon whether to accept the police’s recommendation that he be indicted) fresh in the background and a Leftist press fully mobilized behind her (and against Netanyahu), she could ride a wave of public disgust to the premiership.
But she has an alternative. She too could form a government. With elections a viable option for her, she might be strong enough to temper the demands of potential coalition partners. Though her hands would get a bit dirty in the process, she could gain an invaluable asset: credibility as a PM. While Livni is very popular, Israelis are less certain she is “suitable“ for the post of Prime Minister.
Faced with existential threats, Israeli voters demand more than honesty from their leaders. Ariel Sharon was a case in point. Nearly 60% of the public consistently approved of the job he was doing as Prime Minister even though a nearly equal percentage thought he was corrupt.
By forming a new government, even a short-lived one, she could convince skeptical Israelis that she is ready to handle the top job, and a glaring weakness her opponents could have exploited in the next campaign would be taken off the table.
Exactly how this political storm will play out is still unclear, but the first gusts will be felt any day now.





Indeed Israel is at a dangerous crossroad. While Olmart has been fiddling the Palestinians have been arming to the teeth with the help of Syria and Iran.
After the US election (my belief is that there will be no major action by any terrorist group before as they would love to deal with a President Obama rather than McCain and any terror act reminds the American electorate just how naive Obama is)there will be another mid east war that the Israeli’s will loose again but with much more casualties and property loses.
Not clear to me that Livni is up to the job.
Excellent article. Since I am very familiar with hurricanes, it looks to me like Kadima will make sure that the Israel remains under the muddy waters of Hurricane IKE.
Livni is too weak and too lacking in political savvy to form a government, so Olmert will remain in power indefinitely or until he is indicted, which could take months. Worse, during that time, Israel will effectively be without a government that can take decisions on anything, and given the situation here, that might lead to our enemies taking a chance on war. What we need in Israel now is a general election but given the present coalition, they will do and say anything, even up to endangering Israel, to stay in power.