Chairman Isaac Herzog Political position Center-left | Headquarters Tel Aviv, Israel | |
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Leader Isaac Herzog, Tzipi Livni Founded 10 December 2014 (2014-12-10) Ideology Social liberalism
Zionism
Two State solution
Factions:
Social democracy
Labor Zionism
Liberal Zionism |
The Zionist Union (Hebrew: המחנה הציוני, translit. HaMaḥaneh HaTziyoni, lit. the Zionist Camp) is a center-left political alliance in Israel. It was established in December 2014 by the Israeli Labor Party, Hatnuah and Green Movement to create a joint electoral list to contest the 20th Knesset elections with the hope of unseating Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Contents
History
The Labor Party and Hatnuah agreed on 10 December 2014 to form a joint ticket. The list was established to create a large electoral list for the centre-left bloc, in the hope that it will lead the 34th government. Hatnuah leader Tzipi Livni has said that other parties will also be part of the alliance. Livni and Labor leader Isaac Herzog initially said that if the alliance were to win enough seats to lead the next government, they would rotate in the post of Prime Minister, with Herzog serving for the first half of the Knesset's four-year term and Livni for the second half, though Livni announced on 16 March 2015 that only Herzog would serve as prime minister.
Manuel Trajtenberg, number 11 on the list, was the list's candidate for finance minister. Amos Yadlin was the list's candidate for defense minister, though he was not a candidate for the Knesset. The Green Movement was also represented on the list through the addition of Yael Cohen Paran on a spot (No. 25) for Hatnuah members.
Main issues
Key issues for the Zionist Union included the following:
Other positions
In addition, the Zionist Union is in favor of the following:
List of Knesset members
The following are the candidates elected to the 20th Knesset from the Zionist Union's party list.
Results
After the election, the Zionist Union emerged as the second-largest party in the Knesset, with 24 seats. It triumphed in Tel Aviv and its prosperous suburbs, as well as other liberal areas. Its success was mostly in affluent areas; it won the highest number of votes in 28 of Israel's 33 wealthiest communities.