Yamin Yisrael
Yamin Yisrael ימין ישראל | |
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Founded | 24 July 1995 |
Split from | Moledet |
Ideology | Right-wing |
Most seats | 1 (1995–1996) |
Yamin Yisrael (Hebrew: ימין ישראל, lit. Right Israel) was a minor right-wing political party in Israel.
Background
The party was founded on 24 July 1995 when Shaul Gutman broke away from Moledet.[1] It ran in the 1996 elections, but failed to cross the electoral threshold of 1.5% and did not win a seat.
In the 2003 elections the party ran a joint list with Herut – The National Movement. Although together the parties won 36,202 votes (1.1%), they were 8,000 short of the threshold. For the 2006 elections the party ran alongside Baruch Marzel's Jewish National Front, winning 28,824 votes (0.79%) and again failing to cross the threshold.
The party did not run in the 2009 elections.
Ideology
The party's objectives were to:[2]
- Replace the current proportional representation system for elections with a constituency-based method.
- Institute a presidential system of government.
- Presidential appointment of Supreme Court judges.
- Enforce the basic law prohibiting parties that negate the Jewish nature of the state
- Rescind citizenship of "disloyal" citizens.
- Rescind large child allowances.
- Rescind the grandfather clause of the Law of Return (which allows non Jews with a Jewish grandparent to claim Israeli citizenship).
- Allow Israelis living abroad to vote.
- Castigate CNN and the BBC for being "a facade for antisemitism".
- Phase out U.S. military aid to Israel
References
- ↑ "Mergers and Splits Among Parliamentary Groups". Knesset. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
- ↑ Jewish and Democratic Solution to the Arab Problem Paul Eidelberg, 17 April 2002
External links
- Party history Knesset website
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