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1999 Israeli general election
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| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| country | Israel |
| type | presidential |
| election_date | 17 May 1999 |
| module | {{Infobox election |
| embed | yes |
| election_name | Prime ministerial election |
| previous_election | 1996 Israeli general election |
| previous_year | 1996 |
| next_election | 2001 Israeli prime ministerial election |
| next_year | 2001 |
| type | presidential |
| turnout | 78.71% |
| image1 | Ehud Barak 1999.jpg |
| candidate1 | Ehud Barak |
| party1 | One Israel |
| popular_vote1 | **1,791,020** |
| percentage1 | **56.08%** |
| image2 | Benjamin Netanyahu 1996.jpg |
| candidate2 | Benjamin Netanyahu |
| party2 | Likud |
| popular_vote2 | 1,402,474 |
| percentage2 | 43.92% |
| title | Prime Minister |
| posttitle | Prime Minister after election |
| before_election | Benjamin Netanyahu |
| before_party | Likud |
| after_election | Ehud Barak |
| after_party | One Israel |
| module | {{Infobox legislative election |
| embed | yes |
| election_name | Knesset election |
| previous_election | [1996](1996-israeli-general-election) |
| next_election | [2003](2003-israeli-legislative-election) |
| leader1 | Ehud Barak |
| party1 | One Israel |
| percentage1 | 20.26 |
| last_election1 | 37 |
| seats1 | 26 |
| leader2 | Benjamin Netanyahu |
| party2 | Likud |
| percentage2 | 14.14 |
| last_election2 | 27 |
| seats2 | 19 |
| leader3 | Aryeh Deri |
| party3 | Shas |
| percentage3 | 13.01 |
| last_election3 | 10 |
| seats3 | 17 |
| leader4 | Yossi Sarid |
| party4 | Meretz |
| percentage4 | 7.66 |
| last_election4 | 9 |
| seats4 | 10 |
| leader5 | Natan Sharansky |
| party5 | Yisrael BaAliyah |
| percentage5 | 5.19 |
| last_election5 | 7 |
| seats5 | 6 |
| leader6 | Yosef Lapid |
| party6 | Shinui |
| percentage6 | 5.07 |
| last_election6 | new |
| seats6 | 6 |
| leader7 | Yitzhak Mordechai |
| party7 | Centre Party |
| percentage7 | 5.00 |
| last_election7 | new |
| seats7 | 6 |
| leader8 | Yitzhak Levi |
| party8 | National Religious Party |
| percentage8 | 4.24 |
| last_election8 | 9 |
| seats8 | 5 |
| leader9 | Meir Porush |
| party9 | United Torah Judaism |
| percentage9 | 3.80 |
| last_election9 | 4 |
| seats9 | 5 |
| leader10 | Abdulmalik Dehamshe |
| party10 | United Arab List |
| percentage10 | 3.47 |
| last_election10 | 6 |
| seats10 | 5 |
| leader11 | Benny Begin |
| party11 | National Union (Israel) |
| percentage11 | 3.03 |
| last_election11 | new |
| seats11 | 4 |
| leader13 | Avigdor Lieberman |
| party13 | Yisrael Beiteinu |
| percentage13 | 2.60 |
| last_election13 | new |
| seats13 | 4 |
| leader12 | Mohammad Barakeh |
| party12 | Hadash |
| percentage12 | 2.63 |
| last_election12 | 4 |
| seats12 | 3 |
| leader14 | Azmi Bishara |
| party14 | Balad (political party) |
| percentage14 | 2.00 |
| last_election14 | 1 |
| seats14 | 2 |
| leader15 | Amir Peretz |
| party15 | One Nation |
| percentage15 | 1.94 |
| last_election15 | new |
| seats15 | 2 |
| before_election | Dan Tichon |
| before_party | Likud |
| after_election | Avraham Burg |
| after_party | One Israel |
| title | Speaker of the Knesset |
Early general elections for both the Prime Minister and the Knesset were held in Israel on 17 May 1999 following a vote of no confidence in the government; the incumbent Likud Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, ran for re-election.
The elections were only the second time in Israeli history that the prime minister had been directly elected; the first such election in 1996 had been an extremely tight contest between Benjamin Netanyahu of Likud and Shimon Peres of Labor, with Netanyahu winning by just 29,000 votes.
Labor leader Ehud Barak, promising peace talks with the Palestinians and withdrawal from Lebanon by July 2000, was elected Prime Minister with 56% of the vote.
History
In the Israeli–Palestinian peace process, although the Likud government had negotiated the Wye River Memorandum and it had passed the Knesset overwhelmingly in November 1998, subsequent negotiations with the Palestinians were going badly. The lack of progress had alienated support for the government on the left, as well as on its right. The left claimed negotiations were moving too slowly, while the more extreme right were unhappy with the contemplated territorial concessions included in the memorandum itself.
The Likud–Gesher–Tzomet alliance had fallen apart, with more members leaving Likud to set up Herut – The National Movement and the Centre Party.
Netanyahu's government finally gave up the ghost due to difficulties in passing the state budget and in January 1999 passed a bill calling for early elections.
Ehud Barak, the leader of the main opposition Labor Party, was Netanyahu's main challenger in this election. Before the elections, Ehud Barak's Labor Party formed an alliance with Gesher and Meimad called One Israel in the hope that a united front on the centre-left would give them enough seats to form a more stable coalition.
The rising death toll and lack of military victory in Israel's long-running occupation in south Lebanon had soured voter support for the Likud policy.
Parliament factions
Main article: List of political parties in Israel
The table below lists the parliamentary factions represented in the 14th Knesset.
| Name | Ideology | Symbol | Leader | 1996 result | Seats at 1999 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| dissolution | Votes (%) | Seats | ||||||
| Israeli Labor Party}};" | Labor | |||||||
| (in One Israel) | Social democracy | Ehud Barak | 26.8% | |||||
| Likud}};" | Likud-Gesher-Tzomet | National liberalism | Benjamin Netanyahu | 25.1% | ||||
| Shas}};" | Shas | Religious conservatism | ||||||
| Populism | Aryeh Deri | 8.5% | ||||||
| National Religious Party}};" | Mafdal | Religious Zionism | Yitzhak Levi | 7.9% | ||||
| Meretz}};" | Meretz | Democratic socialism | ||||||
| Secularism | Yossi Sarid | 7.4% | ||||||
| United Torah Judaism}};" | UTJ | Religious conservatism | Avraham Yosef Shapira | 3.2% | ||||
| Hadash}};" | Hadash-Balad | Communism | ||||||
| Socialism | Tawfiq Ziad | 4.2% | ||||||
| Moledet | Ultranationalism | Rehavam Ze'evi | 2.4% | |||||
| Ra'am-Mada | Israeli Arab interests | Abdulwahab Darawshe | 2.9% | |||||
| Third Way | Centrism | Avigdor Kahalani | 3.2% | |||||
| Shinui}};" | Shinui | Liberalism | ||||||
| Secularism | Yosef Lapid | - | ||||||
| Gesher}};" | Gesher (in One Israel) | Liberal conservatism | ||||||
| Economic egalitarianism | - | David Levy | - | *with Likud and Tzomet* | ||||
| Tzomet}};" | Tzomet | Nationalism | ||||||
| Secularism | - | N/A | - | *with Likud and Gesher* | ||||
| Balad (political party)}};" | Balad | Arab nationalism | ||||||
| Pan-Arabism | Azmi Bishara | - | ||||||
| One Nation (Israel)}};" | One Nation | Social democracy | ||||||
| Democratic socialism | Amir Peretz | - | *part of Labor* |
Campaign
Initially, three other candidates planned to run; these included: Benny Begin of Herut – The National Movement, running to the right of Likud; Azmi Bishara of the Israeli Arab Balad party, running to the left of One Israel and the first from that minority to stand for prime minister, and; Yitzhak Mordechai of the Centre Party, running on positions between those of Likud on the right and One Israel on the left.
Over the course of the campaign however, Begin, Bishara and Mordechai all dropped out of the race for prime minister, after it became clear that they could not win, and that their continued presence would cost votes for the major candidates, Barak and Netanyahu, at their respective ends of the political spectrum. The parties these other candidates represented however, continued to run in the concurrent Knesset elections. Mordechai did not withdraw until two days before the election, and after he and his party had ran a series of advertisements.
Two parties, Manhigut Yehudit and Voice of the Environment, initially signed up to participate in the elections, but withdrew their candidacy before election day.
Both Meretz and Yisrael BaAliyah stressed the need to overtake Shas so that its influence on the next government would be limited. Meretz did this because of Shas's participation in Netanyahu's government, while Yisrael BaAliyah, who was also in that government, was against Shas for obstructing the citizenship process for arrivals of the 1990s post-Soviet aliyah. Yisrael BaAliyah demanded that they be given the Ministry of Interior (which oversees the citizenship process) as a pre-requisite of joining a government coalition, which Ehud Barak fulfilled after becoming Prime Minister.
Shas campaigned on resolving economic injustices towards the Mizrahi community, and protested the perceived 'excessive rights' given to Soviet migrants.
Meretz specifically attacked Shas by saying it would serve Netanyahu's needs whether it be in a left-wing or right-wing coalition, and criticised One Nation, the Greens, the Pnina Rosenblum list and Shinui for being 'one-issue parties' that siphoned off votes that Meretz needed to beat Shas.{{cite web |title=מי תהיה המפלגה השלישית - מרצ או ש"ס? אתם תחליטו.
Mafdal campaigned on returning 'traditional values' to Israel and attacked Meretz for wanting 'freedom from Judaism'.
Endorsements by parties
| Candidate | Party | Other parties supporting | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Likud}}" | Netanyahu | Likud | |
| Yisrael Beiteinu}}" | Yisrael Beiteinu | ||
| One Israel}}" | Barak | One Israel |
Party slogans
| Party or alliance | title=סיסמאות בפוליטיקה הישראלית | url=https://he.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D7%A1%D7%99%D7%A1%D7%9E%D7%90%D7%95%D7%AA_%D7%91%D7%A4%D7%95%D7%9C%D7%99%D7%98%D7%99%D7%A7%D7%94_%D7%94%D7%99%D7%A9%D7%A8%D7%90%D7%9C%D7%99%D7%AA | access-date=28 December 2025 | website=Hebrew Wikiquote}} | English translation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Likud}}" | Likud | ||||
| National Religious Party}}" | Mafdal | ||||
| Meretz}}" | Meretz | ||||
| "Which party will finish in third — Meretz or Shas? You decide." | |||||
| United Torah Judaism}}" | UTJ | ||||
| Hadash}}" | Hadash | ||||
| Shinui}}" | Shinui | ||||
| Yisrael BaAliyah}}" | Yisrael BaAliyah | "МВД под ШАС контроль? Нет, МВД под наш контроль." | |||
| "МВД под наш контроль - и жильё под наш контроль" | "The Ministry of Interior [is] under our control, and [[the Ministry of] Housing](ministry-of-housing-israel) is under our control [as well]. | ||||
| Center Party (Israel)}}" | Center Party | ||||
| National Union (Israel)}}" | National Union | ||||
| Yisrael Beiteinu}}" | Yisrael Beiteinu | ||||
| One Nation (Israel)}}" | One Nation |
Debates
| Date | Organizer | Moderator | Present Invitee Non-invitee | Likud | Center Party | Refs | Likud}}" | Center Party (Israel)}}" | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mashal Ham | **P** | |||||||||
| Benjamin Netanyahu | **P** | |||||||||
| Yitzhak Mordechai |
Results
Prime minister
Knesset
Yisrael Beiteinu gained a seat after the vote-sharing process was completed.
Aftermath
Although Barak won the Prime Ministerial election comfortably, his One Israel alliance won only 26 seats, meaning he had to form a convoluted coalition with Shas, Meretz, Yisrael BaAliyah, the Centre Party, the National Religious Party and United Torah Judaism.
When Barak's government collapsed after the start of the Second Intifada and the October Israeli Arab riots in 2000, Barak called new elections for Prime Minister in the hope of winning an authoritative mandate. However, he was well-beaten by Ariel Sharon and subsequently retired from politics.
15th Knesset
After winning the Prime Ministerial elections, Ehud Barak formed the 28th government of Israel on 6 July 1999. His coalition included One Israel, Shas, Meretz, Yisrael BaAliyah, the Centre Party, the National Religious Party and United Torah Judaism, and initially had 16 ministers, though the number later rose to 24. Avraham Burg was appointed as Speaker of the Knesset.
United Torah Judaism left the coalition in September 1999 after a breach of the Sabbath. The government finally collapsed on 10 December 2000 when Barak resigned in the face of the outbreak of the Second Intifada and the Israeli Arab riots of October. Barak called new elections for the position of Prime Minister, which he lost to Ariel Sharon.
Sharon formed the 29th government on 7 March 2001. He set up a national unity government, including Likud, Labor-Meimad, Shas, the Centre Party, the National Religious Party, United Torah Judaism, Yisrael BaAliyah, and National Union-Yisrael Beiteinu. Sharon's government had 26 ministers, which later rose to 29, necessitating the addition of a small table to the end of the Ministers row in the Knesset.
During the Knesset term, there were several splits, mergers, and defections. The One Israel alliance broke into its constituent parts, Labor-Meimad (25 seats) and Gesher (2 seats). Five members left the Centre Party, with three forming New Way and two establishing Lev, which immediately merged into Likud. Later, two of the three that set up New Way resigned from the Knesset and were replaced by Centre Party members, whilst the remaining New Way MK joined Labor-Meimad. Two MKs left Yisrael BaAliyah to establish the Democratic Choice, whilst three MKs left the United Arab List; two established the Arab National Party and one formed National Unity – National Progressive Alliance. Michael Kleiner left the National Union to establish Herut – The National Movement, whilst the National Union became allied to Yisrael Beiteinu. Ahmed Tibi left Balad to establish Ta'al.
Notes
References
References
- [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/nov/29/israel Barak calls early election] ''The Guardian'', 29 November 2000
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20101016052629/http://www.adl.org/backgrounders/lebanon_withdrawal.asp Israel's Withdrawal from Lebanon] ADL
- Peretz, Don. (2000). "Sectarian Politics and the Peace Process: The 1999 Israel Elections". Middle East Journal.
- "סיסמאות בפוליטיקה הישראלית".
- (13 April 2022). "ערוץ 2: עימות הבחירות נתניהו-מרדכי, 13.04.1999".
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