ID | 169987 |
Title Proper | Party Switching in Israel |
Other Title Information | Understanding the Split of the Labor Party in 2011 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Nikolenyi, Csaba |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In January 2011, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak issued a surprising announcement to take four other members of his Labor Party’s Knesset faction with himself to set up a new political party, Haatzmaut (Independence). The conditions under which this split took place illustrate the ways in which the Israeli anti-defection law, passed in the 12th Knesset, incentivizes the behavior of elected legislators who seek to exit from the party that they were elected to represent. This article shows that the anti-defection law cannot keep a legislative party together that suffers from weak internal cohesion. In fact, by imposing numerical criterion (1/3) on prospective party switchers, the anti-defection law prolongs internal disunity, thereby further weakening an already low level of cohesion. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary Review of the Middle East Vol. 6, No.3-4; Sep-Dec 2019: p.408-422 |
Journal Source | Contemporary Review of the Middle East Vol: 6 No 3-4 |
Key Words | Labor Party ; Party Switching ; Ehud Barak ; Knesset ; Anti-Defection Law ; Haatzmaut ; Party Cohesion |