Greens to split as members join r... JPost on day true story
"For a & variety of arcane historical reasons, two competing green parties emerged in & Israel," Green Movement co-chairman Prof. Alon Tal told The Jerusalem Post on & Thursday.
"This duplication is not only tactically disastrous, but it is & substantively unjustified."
On Friday morning, at a meeting in Tel Aviv, & the majority of Green Party members serving on city councils – roughly 85 & percent to 90% of them – will leave their organization to join the Green & Movement, according to Hadas Shaknai, a Green Party member who served on the Tel & Aviv-Jaffa city council for 10 years. There are about 45 Green Party members & serving on city councils throughout the country, she said.
"It's & something that we should have done years ago, and it's an obvious way to reach & the election," Shaknai told the Post on Thursday.
"When parties join & together, they become stronger."
She would not share her opinions about & the reasons for the split in the Green Party, but said that she was no longer & connected with the organization in which she used to serve as secretary-general, & and that she was taking city council representatives from 20 municipalities with & her. Council members from Nahariya, Kiryat Ata, Nesher, Hadera, Ramat Hasharon, & Hod Hasharon, Netanya, Modi'in, Ramat Gan, Givatayim, Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Rishon & Lezion, Ashdod, Ashkelon, Kiryat Ono, Pardesiya and a few others will be joining & her, she confirmed.
Pe'er Visner, the former longtime chairman of the & Green Party, told the Post that those leaving to join the Green Movement had had & no real connection with his party for some time, and that they certainly did not & comprise 85% of its city council members.
But Tal said that "the party is & in shambles" and that this was in part due to the fact that Visner "ran it as a & dictator."
Tal said that when the Green Movement approached Visner and & proposed a merger before the 2009 elections, Visner refused to institute a & democratic process for selecting a joint party chairman.
Dror Ezra, a & member of the Herzliya City Council, is now head of the Green Party, which Tal & said would have very few council members left on Friday.
"Dror Ezra is & very committed to the environment," Tal said. "I call on him to join the 85% – & to be part of one single unit."
Ezra said that the Green Movement had & made the same announcement several times, and that he had no idea how many & people had left the Green Party, as he had not received any resignation & letters.
"We don't force anybody to be in our party," Ezra told the Post. & "I personally don't pursue politicians from other parties. I think that it's not & moral behavior in a political system, nor is it green behavior."
He said & that before the 2009 elections, his party invited Green Movement members to join & his organization, but they refused.
"They threatened us, [saying] that if & you don't give us your party, we will destroy you," Ezra said. "And this is what & they did."
Meanwhile, he charged that the Green Movement had posted a & video online about corruption within the Green Party.
"They waged a war & because we didn't surrender to their blackmail," he said.
He and his & fellow Green Party members are just "regular people," while Green Movement & members are largely academics who began a sort of tribal battle against them, & according to Ezra.
To these allegations, Tal responded that Shaknai and & the representatives from 20 city councils had approached his party about & becoming one movement.
"[Ezra] has a role to play and we have to learn & from the lessons of the past and move forward," Tal said. "I salute his & environmentalism and don't feel that there is enough room in this country for & more than one green party."
He called on Ezra "to join the rest of his & colleagues and the Green Movement as a single, unified, democratic green party & for the good of Israel and the environment."
Tal founded the Green & Movement alongside Eran Ben-Yemini in late 2008 as "an environmental and social & political party uniting activists, founders of environmental organizations, city & council members and academics, philosophers and scientists," according to the & party's mission statement. Now co-chaired by Tal and Racheli Tidhar-Caner, the & movement relies on a Council of Experts – professionals in science, environment, & society, education and planning – to make policy decisions.
The Green & Movement ran on a joint list with the Meimad party for the 18th Knesset & elections in 2009, but was unable to win a seat.
According to the & movement's representatives, the latest election polls show that it would win & three Knesset seats in the next election.
The Green Party, historically & known as "the Greens," was founded in 1997 after the collapse of the bridge at & the Maccabiah Games opening ceremony, according to its mission statement, with & the logic of, "Why invest in a bridge that we will dismantle tomorrow?" During & the municipal elections of 1998, Visner and Shaknai's party won seats on the Tel & Aviv- Jaffa City Council. The 2003 municipal elections showed an increase in & Green Party representation, with the Greens and other environmentally friendly & parties submitting lists for 14 municipal council elections.
They now & have representatives in councils all over the country.
Nationally, while & the Greens have never won a Knesset seat, they received more than 13,000 votes & in 1999, 13,000 votes in 2003, 48,000 votes in 2006 and around 12,000 votes in & 2009.
"I am delighted that the voices of reason and moderation prevailed & and that we now have an agreement in place that will allow the Green Movement to & take its place as a major political player in the national and local & governments," said Tal, who is also a professor at Ben-Gurion University's Jacob & Blaustein Institute for Desert Research.
"A party that prioritizes & quality of life, equality, justice and preserving our resources for future & generations is actually the best expression of Zionism for the next century," he & said.
The combined organization intends to hold internal elections in & September, and Tal said he expected the Green Movement to end up the largest & party locally after the 2013 local municipal elections, making use of the & infrastructure that the former Greens already have solidly in & place.
"This is a revolution in terms of green policy," Tal said, adding & that other parties had expressed interest in future cooperation & nationally.
The success of green parties in Europe can certainly be & replicated in Israel, he asserted. In Germany, where the green party & transformation began, there are already state governors from the country's Green & Party, he said.
"The political map in Europe has undergone a total & transition, with Green Parties now filling a key role in parliaments and & governments across the continent," Tal said. "But at the local level, green & politicians are seizing the reins of power and introducing an agenda of & sustainability."
He is confident that the new Green Movement, acting & together, will make a strong impact on the country's political & future.
"The political mosaic in Israel is starting to change. The fact & that so many citizens voted green in local and national elections means that & there is a generational shift in priorities and that the tired political & Right-Left rhetoric of the old parties is increasingly irrelevant," he said. "At & the Friday convention, a united Green Movement opens its local and national & campaign with a strong national presence and an agenda for improving the lives & of all Israelis."&
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