Alternative for Yisrael: Difference between revisions
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|founder = [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] | |founder = [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] | ||
|leader1_title = | |leader1_title = [[Yisrael#Cabinet|Economic Development Minister]] | ||
|leader1_name = | |leader1_name = [[Mendel Feinstein]] | ||
|leader2_title = | |leader2_title = | ||
|leader2_name = | |leader2_name = | ||
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|membership_year = | |membership_year = | ||
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|ideology = {{wp|Centrism | |ideology = {{wp|Centrism}}<br />{{wp|Middle class|Middle-income interests}}<br />[[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)#Nominal_Religious|Chiloni-interests]]<br />{{wp|Economic growth|Growth-interests}}<br />Opposition to {{wp|Green liberalism}}<br />'''Internal Factions:'''<br />{{wp|Classical liberalism}}<br />{{wp|Ordoliberalism}}<br />{{wp|Economic liberalism}}<br />{{wp|Radical centrism}} | ||
|position = {{wp|Centrism|Center}}-to-{{wp|Center-Left}} | |position = {{wp|Centrism|Center}}-to-{{wp|Center-Left}} | ||
|religion = [[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)# | |religion = [[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)#Nominal_Religious|Chiloni-sector]] of {{wp|Orthodox Judaism}} | ||
|national = | |national = | ||
|international = | |international = | ||
|european = | |european = | ||
|europarl = | |europarl = | ||
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|seats1_title = Seats in the [[Knesset|Royal Knesset]] | |seats1_title = Seats in the [[Knesset|Royal Knesset]] | ||
|seats1 = {{Infobox political party/seats| | |seats1 = {{Infobox political party/seats|25|142|hex=#add8e6}} | ||
|seats2_title = | |seats2_title = | ||
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}} | }} | ||
'''Alternative for Yisrael''', | '''Alternative for Yisrael''', most commonly called by its acronym '''AfY''' ({{wp|colloquially}}), is a contemporary {{wp|Centrism|centrist}}, {{wp|Middle-income|middle-income family interests}}, and [[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)#Nominal_Religious|Chiloni-sector interests]] major {{wp|Political party|political party}} in [[Yisrael]]. [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|Since 2020]], it has {{wp|Realignment election|displaced}} the [[Constitutional Liberal Party]] as the {{wp|Loyal opposition|chief opposition}} to the governing [[Right Bloc]]. | ||
The AfY {{wp|splinter group|splintered}} from the {{wp|Loyal opposition|chief opposition party}} the [[Constitutional Liberal Party|Constitutional Liberals]] in advance of the [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|2020 general election]] due to what its founder ascribed as [[Chiloni-dati divide (Yisrael)|illegal | The AfY {{wp|splinter group|splintered}} from the {{wp|Loyal opposition|chief opposition party}} the [[Constitutional Liberal Party|Constitutional Liberals]] in advance of the [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|2020 general election]] due to what its founder ascribed as [[Chiloni-dati divide (Yisrael)|widespread illegal secularist thought]] among the Con-Lib ranks. The party at its founding took about a quarter (10 seats) of the Con-Libs' caucus of sitting [[Knesset|Members of Knesset]]. Its political base is thought to compete with the similarly center-right/middle-income-interests [[Action Yisrael]] party, which has found great electoral success in the suburban areas outside major metropolitan cities throughout the country. | ||
The [[Action Yisrael]] party shortly after the AfY's founding abandoned the [[Right Bloc]] due to its increasing [[Neoconservatism (Yisrael)|Neoconservatism]] and joined the AfY to form the [[United Center Bloc]]. After the 2020 elections, the United Center Bloc, led by the AfY, is the chief opposition in the [[Knesset]]. Owing to the political custom that the majority party or coalition selects one Cabinet position from the chief opposition, AfY member Mendel Feinstein serves as the [[Yisrael#Cabinet|Economic Development Minister]] in the [[Yitzchok Katz|Katz]] [[Yisrael#Cabinet|Cabinet]]. | |||
==Platform and philosophy== | ==Platform and philosophy== | ||
While the party outlined a few broadly and vaguely {{wp|centrist}} principles upon its launch, its platform did not have substantive depth until after the formation of the [[United Center Bloc]] with the [[Action Yisrael]]. | |||
On November 24, 2019, the AfY released a {{wp|Manifesto#Political|political manifesto and legislative agenda}} if given the reins of power, or if it gained enough power to influence the majority: | |||
* '''Party of Moderates and Centrists''': the AfY pledged that it would represent the political interests of the {{wp|political center}} in [[Yisrael]], and rejected extremism and radicalism. | |||
* '''Religious Status Quo Maintained''': The party advocated for a {{wp|status quo}} in the [[Chiloni-dati divide (Yisrael)|''Chiloni''-''Dati'' divide]], rejecting the [[Constitutional Liberal Party#Platform_and_philosophy|Con-Libs' efforts to pare back or relax religious law enforcement]] as well as the [[Royalist Conservative Party (Yisrael)|Conservatives' policy and funding initiatives to expand such enforcement]], citing the foreign-policy {{wp|scandal}} known as the [[Midnight Affair]] as a result of overzealous prosecution. | |||
* '''Resolute Foreign Policy''': Detailing more of the party's {{wp|National liberalism|national-liberal}} center of gravity, the AfY argued for a forceful diplomatic and national security posture that protected Yisraeli interests and citizens {{wp|near abroad|near}} and far and supported a more aggressive [[Christian terrorism in Yisrael|counter-terrorism policy]]. | |||
* '''New Transportation Funding and Capital Projects''': One of the party's leading {{wp|public policy|public policies}}, the AfY advocated for expanding the existing [[Government of Yisrael|Royal Government]]'s transportation budget by $5.6 billion [[Yisraeli new shekel|shekels]] over ten years, lowering most {{wp|toll road|tolls}} and the royal {{wp|gas tax}}, as well as abolishing the experimental {{wp|congestion pricing}} enacted by the Royal Government in [[Yerushalayim]], [[Dervaylik]], and [[Ashkelon]] in 2010. | |||
* '''New or Expanded Family Tax and Benefit Programs''': The AfY advocated a new set of family tax reduction and subsidy programs, estimated to cost $3.4 billion shekels over ten years by independent economists. To offset some of this cost, it has argued to cut the ''{{wp|kollel}}'' subsidies to ([[Chiloni-dati divide (Yisrael)#Non-Zionist_Religious_Right|the mostly Chareidi]]) {{wp|Torah study|Torah learners}} between 33.3–59.5%, sparking fierce push back by the [[Torah Achdus]] party of the [[Right Bloc]]. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
Line 92: | Line 108: | ||
The party was founded by [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] on November 7, 2019, about two months before the [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|2020 general election]]. | The party was founded by [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] on November 7, 2019, about two months before the [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|2020 general election]]. | ||
Goldschmidt told the ''[[Royal Yerushalayim Dispatch]]'' at a {{wp|press conference}} that, "I did not leave the Constitutional Liberal Party - it left me. Every year, it seems to embrace more and more foreign ideas that have no place in Yisrael. I have personally observed numerous party leaders, including Members of Knesset, alluding to being [[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)#Secularity_v._Religiosity|secret secularists]]. My former party no longer represents who I am. I believe the government can have a positive, active role in making our lives better, but we must remember that all we have comes from Hashem [G-d]. I will no longer stay party to a faction that quietly rejects [[1920 Constitution|the foundation of our very country]]." | Goldschmidt told the ''[[Royal Yerushalayim Dispatch]]'' at a {{wp|press conference}} that, "I did not leave the Constitutional Liberal Party - it left me. Every year, it seems to embrace more and more foreign ideas that have no place in Yisrael. I have personally observed numerous party leaders, including Members of Knesset, alluding to being [[Chiloni-dati_divide_(Yisrael)#Secularity_v._Religiosity|secret secularists]]. My former party no longer represents who I am. I believe the government can have a positive, active role in making our lives better, but we must remember that all we have comes from {{wp|Hashem}} [G-d]. I will no longer stay party to a faction that quietly rejects [[1920 Constitution|the foundation of our very country]]." | ||
He was joined by nine other sitting MKs {{wp| | He was joined by nine other sitting MKs {{wp|Party switching|who left}} the Con-Lib caucus. On November 11, 2019, the AfY registered its new party caucus with the [[Knesset|Secretary of the Royal Knesset]]. On November 14, the AfK announced a large slate of Knesset candidates to compete in targeted Knesset districts. | ||
===2020 elections=== | ===2020 elections=== | ||
====Presidential election==== | ====Presidential election==== | ||
The same day he announced his new party, Goldschmidt also launched a presidential campaign for the upcoming January 27, 2020 election, facing [[Royalist Conservative Party (Yisrael)|Conservative Party]] nominee (and | The same day he announced his new party, Goldschmidt also launched a presidential campaign for the upcoming January 27, 2020 election, facing [[Royalist Conservative Party (Yisrael)|Conservative Party]] nominee (and then-[[Yisrael#Cabinet|Foreign Minister]]) [[Yitzchok Katz]] and [[Constitutional Liberal Party]] nominee (and then-sitting [[Knesset|Member of Knesset]]) [[Yosef Kaduri]]. | ||
[ | [[Yisraeli_general_election,_2020#Three-way_race|Several early polls]] out after his launch had Goldschmidt between 22–29% of the vote, with Katz at 28–43% and Kaduri at 24–35% (some of the polls had large {{wp|swing voter|undecided respondent rates}} that reduced their reliability). | ||
On November 17, 2019, the [[Action Yisrael]] national committee announced it was leaving the [[Party_divisions_of_the_Yisraeli_Knesset#Third_Party_System_.281974-present.29|Conservative-led Blue-Gray-Maroon coalition (2018-19)]] (the [[Knesset|48th Knesset]] had already concluded its last session before the 2020 election) and that it was [[Electoral_College_in_Yisrael#Two-party_presidential_system|cross-endorsing the AfY rather than its former coalition partner the Conservatives]] for the presidential election, as well as announcing an "United Center" {{wp|political alliance|political bloc}} with the AfY in the new 49th session of the Knesset, pledging to not compete against each other's candidates and to cooperate when the next Knesset is seated. | On November 17, 2019, the [[Action Yisrael]] national committee announced it was leaving the [[Party_divisions_of_the_Yisraeli_Knesset#Third_Party_System_.281974-present.29|Conservative-led Blue-Gray-Maroon coalition (2018-19)]] (the [[Knesset|48th Knesset]] had already concluded its last session before the 2020 election) and that it was [[Electoral_College_in_Yisrael#Two-party_presidential_system|cross-endorsing the AfY rather than its former coalition partner the Conservatives]] for the presidential election, as well as announcing an "[[United Center Bloc|United Center]]" {{wp|political alliance|political bloc}} with the AfY in the new 49th session of the Knesset, pledging to not compete against each other's candidates and to cooperate when the next Knesset is seated. | ||
By mid-December, [[Yisraeli_general_election,_2020#Three-way_race|polling showed]] Goldschmidt had overtaken the Con-Libs' Kaduri to become the direct competitor to leading candidate Katz. In early January, Goldschmidt and Katz [[Yisraeli_general_election,_2020#Three-way_race|were neck and neck]] in the polls. However, after [[Hezekian Reaction|the passing of King Yaakov II and the pause in campaigning and subsequently the enthroning of his heir King Hezekiah III, who gave a subtle endorsement of the Conservatives live on air during his televised speech to the country]], Goldschmidt's momentum reversed as his carefully-stitched together centrist coalition started to bleed right and left. | |||
After polling as high as 44% during the end of the presidential contest, Goldschmidt ended up with 31% of the popular vote and 64 Electoral Votes in [[Electoral College in Yisrael|the Electoral College]]. | |||
====Knesset elections==== | ====Knesset elections==== | ||
Several early polls showed the AfY maintaining its current seats and adding between 3-10 additional seats, mostly at the expense of the Con-Libs, [[Alliance of Greens, Seculars, and Workers]], and to a lesser degree, the Conservatives. | Several early polls showed the AfY maintaining its current seats and adding between 3-10 additional seats, mostly at the expense of the Con-Libs, [[Alliance of Greens, Seculars, and Workers]], and to a lesser degree, the Conservatives. | ||
At the end of the 2020 elections, the AfY and AY swept a number of marginal and suburban/urban former Con-Lib strongholds, with the AfY gaining 15 seats and the AY 5 new seats. All but five of their gains came from the Con-Libs and the minor left-wing party the [[Alliance of Greens, Seculars, and Workers]]. | |||
====District and local elections==== | ====District and local elections==== | ||
The [[United Center Bloc]], which was usually led by AfY candidates, ousted both Con-Lib governors in the [[District system (Yisrael)#Districts|Central and Southern]] Districts. AfY and the AY continued their suburban and urban wave in District legislative races, uprooting Con-Libs and some Conservatives across the country in lower races. | |||
=====Southern===== | |||
In the [[District system (Yisrael)#Districts|Southern District]], popular former [[Constitutional Liberal Party|Constitutional Liberal]] [[Netanel Aut-Aurifex]] who ran as the AfY's candidate beat sitting incumbent Con-Lib Gov. [[Gavriel Halperin]] by a stunning 53.4%, running slightly ahead of Goldschmidt's numbers in the District, with Halperin behind with 30.8% and the little-funded Conservative garnering 15%. | |||
The unicamerical legislature, called the District Council, was going into 2020 split 55 Con Lib, 34 Conservative, and 11 other. After 2020, the United Center parties redrew the map: the AfY won 27 seats, its partner the Action Yisrael 19 seats, the Conservatives lost 11 to 26 seats, and the Con-Libs and the AGSW won 27 seats combined. | |||
=====Central===== | |||
In the historic stronghold of the Con-Libs, a political earthquake was occurring. Goldschmidt won 42.9% to Kaduri's 33.5%. | |||
In the governor's race, incumbent Con-Lib [[Hershel Yakowitz]] faced former moderate Conservative governor [[Yitzchok Felix]], who had joined the [[Action Yisrael]] and was the United Center candidate against Yakowitz. Unusually, he was cross-endorsed by the Conservatives. He ousted Yakowitz 54.6%-45.1%. | |||
In the bicameral Central legislature, the AfY made large gains across suburban and exurban seats. | |||
==Organization and hierarchy== | ==Organization and hierarchy== | ||
Line 115: | Line 153: | ||
===Current representation=== | ===Current representation=== | ||
The AfY currently have | The AfY currently have 25 MKs in the [[Knesset|Royal Knesset]]. It is the {{wp|Loyal opposition|Chief Opposition}} in [[Government of Yisrael|HRM's Government]]. It is led by party leader [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] (AfY-[[Modiin]]), who is also the [[Knesset#Officer|Knesset Minority Leader]]. | ||
===Election results=== | ===Election results=== | ||
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:100%; line-height:16px;" | |||
|- | |||
! colspan="9"|[[Knesset|Royal Knesset]] | |||
|- | |||
! width="60px"| Election | |||
! width="100px"| Leader | |||
! width="100px"| Seats won | |||
! width="60px"| +/− | |||
! width="30px"| Rank | |||
! width="125px"| Majority | |||
|- | |||
! [[Yisraeli general election, 2022|2022]] | |||
| [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] | |||
| {{Composition bar|19|142|hex=#add8e6}} | |||
| {{decrease}} 6 | |||
| #2 | |||
| style="background:#FFA07A;"| Minority | |||
|- | |||
! [[Yisraeli general election, 2020|2020]] | |||
| [[Reuven Goldschmidt]] | |||
| {{Composition bar|25|142|hex=#add8e6}} | |||
| {{increase}} 15 | |||
| #2 | |||
| style="background:#FFA07A;"| Minority | |||
|- | |||
|} | |||
==International affiliation and criticism== | ==International affiliation and criticism== | ||
The party | The party is affiliated with the [[List_of_political_parties_in_Sydalon#Parties_with_Parliament_representation|Democratic Alternative]] party in [[Sydalon]]. | ||
[[Category:Yisrael]] | [[Category:Yisrael]] |
Latest revision as of 21:39, 5 February 2023
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Alternative for Yisrael אלטרנטיבה לישראל | |
---|---|
name | Modern Hebrew |
Leader | Reuven Goldschmidt |
Economic Development Minister | Mendel Feinstein |
Founder | Reuven Goldschmidt |
Founded | November 7, 2019 |
Split from | Constitutional Liberal Party |
Headquarters | Modiin, Yisrael |
Ideology | Centrism Middle-income interests Chiloni-interests Growth-interests Opposition to Green liberalism Internal Factions: Classical liberalism Ordoliberalism Economic liberalism Radical centrism |
Political position | Center-to-Center-Left |
Religion | Chiloni-sector of Orthodox Judaism |
Colors | Light blue |
Seats in the Royal Knesset | 25 / 142
|
Alternative for Yisrael, most commonly called by its acronym AfY (colloquially), is a contemporary centrist, middle-income family interests, and Chiloni-sector interests major political party in Yisrael. Since 2020, it has displaced the Constitutional Liberal Party as the chief opposition to the governing Right Bloc.
The AfY splintered from the chief opposition party the Constitutional Liberals in advance of the 2020 general election due to what its founder ascribed as widespread illegal secularist thought among the Con-Lib ranks. The party at its founding took about a quarter (10 seats) of the Con-Libs' caucus of sitting Members of Knesset. Its political base is thought to compete with the similarly center-right/middle-income-interests Action Yisrael party, which has found great electoral success in the suburban areas outside major metropolitan cities throughout the country.
The Action Yisrael party shortly after the AfY's founding abandoned the Right Bloc due to its increasing Neoconservatism and joined the AfY to form the United Center Bloc. After the 2020 elections, the United Center Bloc, led by the AfY, is the chief opposition in the Knesset. Owing to the political custom that the majority party or coalition selects one Cabinet position from the chief opposition, AfY member Mendel Feinstein serves as the Economic Development Minister in the Katz Cabinet.
Platform and philosophy
While the party outlined a few broadly and vaguely centrist principles upon its launch, its platform did not have substantive depth until after the formation of the United Center Bloc with the Action Yisrael.
On November 24, 2019, the AfY released a political manifesto and legislative agenda if given the reins of power, or if it gained enough power to influence the majority:
- Party of Moderates and Centrists: the AfY pledged that it would represent the political interests of the political center in Yisrael, and rejected extremism and radicalism.
- Religious Status Quo Maintained: The party advocated for a status quo in the Chiloni-Dati divide, rejecting the Con-Libs' efforts to pare back or relax religious law enforcement as well as the Conservatives' policy and funding initiatives to expand such enforcement, citing the foreign-policy scandal known as the Midnight Affair as a result of overzealous prosecution.
- Resolute Foreign Policy: Detailing more of the party's national-liberal center of gravity, the AfY argued for a forceful diplomatic and national security posture that protected Yisraeli interests and citizens near and far and supported a more aggressive counter-terrorism policy.
- New Transportation Funding and Capital Projects: One of the party's leading public policies, the AfY advocated for expanding the existing Royal Government's transportation budget by $5.6 billion shekels over ten years, lowering most tolls and the royal gas tax, as well as abolishing the experimental congestion pricing enacted by the Royal Government in Yerushalayim, Dervaylik, and Ashkelon in 2010.
- New or Expanded Family Tax and Benefit Programs: The AfY advocated a new set of family tax reduction and subsidy programs, estimated to cost $3.4 billion shekels over ten years by independent economists. To offset some of this cost, it has argued to cut the kollel subsidies to (the mostly Chareidi) Torah learners between 33.3–59.5%, sparking fierce push back by the Torah Achdus party of the Right Bloc.
History
Founding
The party was founded by Reuven Goldschmidt on November 7, 2019, about two months before the 2020 general election.
Goldschmidt told the Royal Yerushalayim Dispatch at a press conference that, "I did not leave the Constitutional Liberal Party - it left me. Every year, it seems to embrace more and more foreign ideas that have no place in Yisrael. I have personally observed numerous party leaders, including Members of Knesset, alluding to being secret secularists. My former party no longer represents who I am. I believe the government can have a positive, active role in making our lives better, but we must remember that all we have comes from Hashem [G-d]. I will no longer stay party to a faction that quietly rejects the foundation of our very country."
He was joined by nine other sitting MKs who left the Con-Lib caucus. On November 11, 2019, the AfY registered its new party caucus with the Secretary of the Royal Knesset. On November 14, the AfK announced a large slate of Knesset candidates to compete in targeted Knesset districts.
2020 elections
Presidential election
The same day he announced his new party, Goldschmidt also launched a presidential campaign for the upcoming January 27, 2020 election, facing Conservative Party nominee (and then-Foreign Minister) Yitzchok Katz and Constitutional Liberal Party nominee (and then-sitting Member of Knesset) Yosef Kaduri.
Several early polls out after his launch had Goldschmidt between 22–29% of the vote, with Katz at 28–43% and Kaduri at 24–35% (some of the polls had large undecided respondent rates that reduced their reliability).
On November 17, 2019, the Action Yisrael national committee announced it was leaving the Conservative-led Blue-Gray-Maroon coalition (2018-19) (the 48th Knesset had already concluded its last session before the 2020 election) and that it was cross-endorsing the AfY rather than its former coalition partner the Conservatives for the presidential election, as well as announcing an "United Center" political bloc with the AfY in the new 49th session of the Knesset, pledging to not compete against each other's candidates and to cooperate when the next Knesset is seated.
By mid-December, polling showed Goldschmidt had overtaken the Con-Libs' Kaduri to become the direct competitor to leading candidate Katz. In early January, Goldschmidt and Katz were neck and neck in the polls. However, after the passing of King Yaakov II and the pause in campaigning and subsequently the enthroning of his heir King Hezekiah III, who gave a subtle endorsement of the Conservatives live on air during his televised speech to the country, Goldschmidt's momentum reversed as his carefully-stitched together centrist coalition started to bleed right and left.
After polling as high as 44% during the end of the presidential contest, Goldschmidt ended up with 31% of the popular vote and 64 Electoral Votes in the Electoral College.
Knesset elections
Several early polls showed the AfY maintaining its current seats and adding between 3-10 additional seats, mostly at the expense of the Con-Libs, Alliance of Greens, Seculars, and Workers, and to a lesser degree, the Conservatives.
At the end of the 2020 elections, the AfY and AY swept a number of marginal and suburban/urban former Con-Lib strongholds, with the AfY gaining 15 seats and the AY 5 new seats. All but five of their gains came from the Con-Libs and the minor left-wing party the Alliance of Greens, Seculars, and Workers.
District and local elections
The United Center Bloc, which was usually led by AfY candidates, ousted both Con-Lib governors in the Central and Southern Districts. AfY and the AY continued their suburban and urban wave in District legislative races, uprooting Con-Libs and some Conservatives across the country in lower races.
Southern
In the Southern District, popular former Constitutional Liberal Netanel Aut-Aurifex who ran as the AfY's candidate beat sitting incumbent Con-Lib Gov. Gavriel Halperin by a stunning 53.4%, running slightly ahead of Goldschmidt's numbers in the District, with Halperin behind with 30.8% and the little-funded Conservative garnering 15%.
The unicamerical legislature, called the District Council, was going into 2020 split 55 Con Lib, 34 Conservative, and 11 other. After 2020, the United Center parties redrew the map: the AfY won 27 seats, its partner the Action Yisrael 19 seats, the Conservatives lost 11 to 26 seats, and the Con-Libs and the AGSW won 27 seats combined.
Central
In the historic stronghold of the Con-Libs, a political earthquake was occurring. Goldschmidt won 42.9% to Kaduri's 33.5%.
In the governor's race, incumbent Con-Lib Hershel Yakowitz faced former moderate Conservative governor Yitzchok Felix, who had joined the Action Yisrael and was the United Center candidate against Yakowitz. Unusually, he was cross-endorsed by the Conservatives. He ousted Yakowitz 54.6%-45.1%.
In the bicameral Central legislature, the AfY made large gains across suburban and exurban seats.
Organization and hierarchy
Election results and current representation
Current representation
The AfY currently have 25 MKs in the Royal Knesset. It is the Chief Opposition in HRM's Government. It is led by party leader Reuven Goldschmidt (AfY-Modiin), who is also the Knesset Minority Leader.
Election results
Royal Knesset | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Election | Leader | Seats won | +/− | Rank | Majority | |||
2022 | Reuven Goldschmidt | 19 / 142
|
6 | #2 | Minority | |||
2020 | Reuven Goldschmidt | 25 / 142
|
15 | #2 | Minority |
International affiliation and criticism
The party is affiliated with the Democratic Alternative party in Sydalon.