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1984 Israeli legislative election

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FieldValue
previous_election[1981](1981-israeli-legislative-election)
next_election[1988](1988-israeli-legislative-election)
election_date23 July 1984
seats_for_electionAll 120 seats in the Knesset
majority_seats61
turnout78.8% ( 0.3 pp)
countryIsrael
party1Alignment (political party)
leader1Shimon Peres
seats144
last_election147
percentage134.9
party2Likud
leader2Yitzhak Shamir
seats241
last_election248
percentage231.9
party3Tehiya-Tzomet
color3#1E2FAA
leader3Yuval Ne'eman
seats35
last_election33
percentage34.0
party4National Religious Party
leader4Yosef Burg
seats44
last_election46
percentage43.5
party5Hadash
leader5Meir Vilner
seats54
last_election54
percentage53.4
party6Shas
colour6#000000
leader6Yitzhak Peretz
seats64
last_election6new
percentage63.1
party7Shinui
leader7Amnon Rubinstein
seats73
last_election72
percentage72.7
party8Ratz (political party)
leader8Shulamit Aloni
seats83
last_election81
percentage82.4
party9Yahad
leader9Ezer Weizman
color9#0000FE
seats93
last_election9new
percentage92.2
party10Progressive List for Peace
leader10Mohammed Miari
seats102
last_election10new
percentage101.8
party11Agudat Yisrael
leader11Avraham Yosef Shapira
seats112
last_election114
percentage111.7
party12Morasha
leader12Haim Drukman
color12#2F4F4F
seats122
last_election12new
percentage121.6
party13Tami
leader13Aharon Abuhatzira
color13#5294AE
seats131
last_election133
percentage131.5
party14Kach
leader14Meir Kahane
color14#FFD800
seats141
last_election140
percentage141.2
party15Ometz
leader15Yigal Hurvitz
color15#132414
seats151
last_election15new
percentage151.2
before_electionYitzhak Shamir
before_partyLikud
after_electionShimon Peres
after_partyAlignment
titlePrime Minister

Legislative elections were held in Israel on 23 July 1984 to elect the eleventh Knesset. Voter turnout was 78.8%. The results saw the Alignment return to being the largest party in the Knesset, a status it had lost in 1977. However, the party could not form a government with any of the smaller parties, resulting in a grand coalition government with Likud, with both party leaders, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Shamir, holding the post of Prime Minister for two years each.

Background

The ongoing South Lebanon conflict

Main article: South Lebanon conflict (1982–2000), Sabra and Shatila massacre, 1982 Tyre headquarters bombing

Bus 300 affair

Main article: Bus 300 affair

Parliamentary factions

Main article: List of political parties in Israel

The table below lists the parliamentary factions represented in the 10th Knesset.

NameIdeologySymbolLeader1981 resultSeats at 1983
dissolutionVotes (%)Seats
Likud}};"LikudNational liberalismYitzhak Shamir37.1%
Alignment (Israel)}};"AlignmentSocial democracy
Labor ZionismShimon Peres36.6%
National Religious Party}};"MafdalReligious ZionismYosef Burg4.9%
Agudat Yisrael}};"Agudat YisraelReligious conservatismAvraham Yosef Shapira3.7%
Hadash}};"HadashCommunism
SocialismMeir Vilner3.4%
Tehiya}};"TehiyaUltranationalism
Revisionist ZionismYuval Ne'eman
Geula Cohen2.3
TamiReligious Zionism
Mizrahi interestsAharon Abuhatzira2.3%
TelemCentrismMoshe Dayan1.6%
Shinui}};"ShinuiLiberalism
CentrismAmnon Rubinstein1.5%
RatzProgressivism
SecularismShulamit Aloni1.4%

Campaign period

Party slogans

Party or allianceOriginal sloganEnglish translation
Likud}}"Likud
Alignment (Israel)}}"Alignment""
National Religious Party}}"Mafdal
Hadash}}"Hadash""
Tehiya}}"Tehiya-Tzomet""
Shinui}}"Shinui
Ratz (political party)}}"Ratz""
Kach (political party)}}"Kach
Shas}}"Shas
Progressive List for Peace}}"Progressive List for Peace

Results

The Eleventh Knesset

Due to the stalemate produced by the elections, it was decided to form a national unity government, with the Alignment and Likud holding the leadership for two years each. The Alignment's Shimon Peres formed the twenty-first government on 13 September 1984. Alongside the Alignment and Likud, the coalition government included the National Religious Party, Agudat Yisrael, Shas, Morasha, Shinui and Ometz. Outside national unity governments formed during wartime (notably the government formed during the Six-Day War in the term of the sixth Knesset, which had 111 MKs), it was the largest-ever coalition in Israeli political history, with 97 MKs.

In accordance with the rotation agreement, Peres resigned in 1986 and Likud's Yitzhak Shamir formed the twenty-second government on 20 October 1986. Shinui left the coalition on 26 May 1987.

The eleventh Knesset also contained two controversial parties, Kach and the Progressive List for Peace (PLFP). Kach was a far-right party that advocated the expulsion of most Israeli Arabs, and although it had run in previous elections, it had not passed the electoral threshold. Ultimately the party was banned after a law was passed barring parties that incited racism. The attempts made to stop Kach from competing in the next elections also affected the PLFP, as the addition of section 7a to the Basic Law dealing with the Knesset ("Prevention of Participation of Candidates List") included the banning of parties that denied Israel's existence as a Jewish state:

:A candidates' list shall not participate in elections to the Knesset if its objects or actions, expressly or by implication, include one of the following... negation of the existence of the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish people.

On this basis, the Central Elections Committee initially banned the PLFP from running for the 1988 elections, arguing that its policies promoted the scrapping of Israel as a Jewish state. However, the decision was eventually overturned by the Supreme Court of Israel, and the party was able to compete in the elections, winning one seat. Nevertheless, the law was not overturned, the Supreme Court merely deciding it was impossible to determine if "the real, central and active purpose [of the PFLP] is to bring about the elimination of the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish people", and attempts were made to ban the Israeli Arab parties Balad and Ta'al using the same law prior to the 2003 elections.

During the Knesset term eight MKs left the Alignment; five to establish Mapam (one of which, Muhammed Wattad, later defected from Mapam to Hadash), Abdulwahab Darawshe to establish the Arab Democratic Party, Yossi Sarid defected to Ratz and Yitzhak Artzi to Shinui. The Alignment also gained three MKs when Yahad merged into it.

Ometz and Tami merged into Likud. Mordechai Virshubski defected from Shinui to Ratz. Rafael Eitan broke away from Tehiya to establish Tzomet. Haim Drukman defected from Morasha to the National Religious Party. Shimon Ben-Shlomo broke away from Shas to sit as an independent.

References

References

  1. [[Dieter Nohlen]], Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) ''Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume I'', p127 {{ISBN. 0-19-924958-X
  2. Beilin, Yossi. (1985-04-01). "The Israeli general election of 1984". Electoral Studies.
  3. "סיסמאות בפוליטיקה הישראלית".
  4. (February 2019)
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