Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08TELAVIV2293
2008-10-07 16:44:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Tel Aviv
Cable title:  

COALITION UPDATE: WAITING ON BARAK

Tags:  PREL PGOV PINR ECON EFIN IS 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO0412
OO RUEHROV
DE RUEHTV #2293/01 2811644
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 071644Z OCT 08
FM AMEMBASSY TEL AVIV
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 8725
INFO RUEHXK/ARAB ISRAELI COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 002293 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/07/2018
TAGS: PREL PGOV PINR ECON EFIN IS
SUBJECT: COALITION UPDATE: WAITING ON BARAK

Classified By: Political Counselor Marc J. Sievers. E.O. 12958: Reason
1.4 (B/D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 002293

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/07/2018
TAGS: PREL PGOV PINR ECON EFIN IS
SUBJECT: COALITION UPDATE: WAITING ON BARAK

Classified By: Political Counselor Marc J. Sievers. E.O. 12958: Reason
1.4 (B/D)


1. (C) Summary: Halfway through her first two weeks' effort
at coalition building, FM Tzipi Livni is laying the
groundwork for an agreement with Labor that could lead to a
coalition deal sometime after the end of the upcoming string
of high holidays that conclude on October 21. This timeframe
will likely mean she will need to avail herself of an
additional 14 days' time to form a government beyond the
initial tranche of 28 days that are provided by law. She has
been handling many of the negotiations herself, and
dispatching trusted allies, such as Kadima MK Tzachi Hanegbi
to Labor and former Cabinet Secretary Israel Maimon to Shas.
The key to a new coalition remains with Barak, who may be on
the cusp of a decision to join her government if and when he
decides what he wants from it. End Summary.

WHAT DOES BARAK REALLY WANT?


2. (C) Livni and Barak have begun discussions of what a
Kadima-Labor partnership might look like over the next
one-to-two years. Minister of Social Welfare, Isaac "Bugey"
Herzog told the Ambassador October 7 that he anticipates a
Kadima-Labor agreement between the two major parties within
days -- as Kadima MK Tzachi Hanegbi and Barak's associates
hammer out details. Meanwhile, Livni's people are
downplaying public expectations and telling the press that
more time will be needed to form a coalition than the initial
28 days provided for by law.


3. (SBU) The talk of the town is that Livni and her circle
of advisors are still not clear on what exactly Barak wants
-- despite a series of well-publicized intimate dinners,
seminars (with economic advisors) and daily telephone calls.
Culling from the commentary and spin picked up in the media,
Barak's demands boil down to three basic sets of issues:

-- Political: maintain the current coalition agreement and
find a way to strengthen Labor's position as the "major
partner" if not "co-equal" in Livni's coalition.

-- Economic: more funds for security needs, university

education, and pensions.

-- Justice Minister Friedmann's efforts to constrain the High
Court must be held in check.


4. (C) Barak himself may not know what he wants most,
according to several Embassy contacts who know him well. He
appears to be searching for a political strategy that will
bolster his profile. Under his leadership the party's
prospects have declined precipitously to the point that Labor
might win just 10-12 seats if early elections were held now.
One day Barak lays down a red-line, demanding Friedmann's
head, and then he or his associates backtrack. During a
recent cabinet meeting, a Barak ally, Agriculture Minister
Shalom Simhon, passed Friedmann a note to reassure him that
Labor merely wanted veto authority over some of Friedmann's
policy initiatives, not his ouster. More recently, Barak and
other Labor MK's laid down demands for increased security and
social spending (for universities, pensions),but following
the dive of the U.S. and Tel Aviv stock markets and after
consultations with financial experts, Barak stated October 6
that "the most urgent order of business right now is dealing
with the economic
crisis. All of our budgetary demands -- pensioners, higher
education, and defense matters -- stand, and we abide by our
decision that the budget can be increased, but we must first
focus on the crisis at hand."

KADIMA WARY ABOUT BUSTING THE BUDGET


5. (C) Livni, backed by Finance Minister Bar-On and other
senior Kadima leaders, is urging fiscal restraint in response
to the global financial crisis. This is partly tactical, as
Livni knows that she'll need to make some payouts to the
ultra-orthodox parties (Shas and UTJ) once she has a deal
with Barak. However, one MK who attended a Finance Committee
meeting on October 6, suggested that Olmert's National
Economic Council head Manuel Trachtenberg had also had an
impact on Livni's strategic thinking: Trachtenberg has begun
to caution Israeli lawmakers not to undertake new fiscal
obligations before the impact of this crisis on Israel is
better understood.

THE ULTRA-ORTHODOX DILEMMA


6. (C) Shas and UTJ have signaled to Kadima that they are
not interested in joining the coalition at this stage in
Livni's negotiations. Eli Yishai has done so by staking out
more explicit demands that the new government pledge not to
discuss Jerusalem with the Palestinians. Now that one of

TEL AVIV 00002293 002 OF 002


Yishai's rivals, Arye Deri, is out of the running to be Mayor
of Jerusalem, he could reenter national politics later next
year - and perhaps supplant Yishai as the Shas political
leader. This may explain why Yishai would prefer to hold
elections sooner rather than later. But Shas and UTJ leaders
know that early elections could yield results that would
allow Likud, Kadima and Labor to form a government without
the ultra-orthodox, a situation which could substantially
reduce their leverage to demand greater allocations for child
allowances and religious education.

LIKUD'S PREDICAMENT


7. (C) The financial crisis has been a two-edged sword for
Opposition Leader Binyamin Netanyahu. To date, he has used
the global meltdown as an opportunity to present himself as
the person with the most experience to tackle the
implications for the Israeli economy. But many parties in
the current Knesset begrudge Netanyahu some of his
cost-cutting actions as finance minister, which, for example,
have left the university system on the brink of collapse and
reduced the social safety net for several, growing
constituencies (the ultra-Orthodox and Israeli Arabs

COMMENT:


8. (C) The wildcard remains Barak: he still appears unable
to come to terms with the idea of serving as number two to
Livni and could opt to throw in the towel and call for early
elections. This is unlikely, according to one observer, as
Barak missed the best political opportunity -- immediately
after the Kadima primaries -- to demand early elections.
Netanyahu seized on the Kadima primary elections as an
opportunity to argue that Livni, while legally Olmert's heir,
lacks legitimacy to serve as prime minister unless she wins a
general election. Other parties in the opposition, such as
Yisrael Beiteinu, are convinced that Livni will succeed in
forming a coalition in the short-term, but that it will
crumble soon thereafter over budget battles in the winter.

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