Right-wing parties in Israel unite, rejecting fringe list
JERUSALEM — Religious-nationalist parties in Israel joined forces late Wednesday ahead of the country’s unprecedented third straight election in one year.
The parties came together after weeks of jockeying and shut out the fringe Jewish Power party which said it would run independently. It did so in the previous elections and did not garner enough votes to make it into the Knesset.
Jewish Power’s top candidates for the Knesset are successors of the late rabbi Meir Kahane, who advocated the forced removal of Palestinians and a Jewish theocracy. Kahane’s Kach party was banned from the Israeli parliament in the 1980s, and the U.S. classified his Jewish Defence League as a terrorist group.
The bloc, whose constituents are hard-line religious Israelis, many of them West Bank settlers, has been riven by traditionalists who tend to follow the conservative policy directives of rabbis and a more liberal stream, led by Defence Minister Naftali Bennett who has sought to broaden his party’s appeal. Bennett will head the right-wing union going into the March 2 vote.