Every week, as regular as clockwork,
I receive an email message from the business networking company, LinkedIn:
'Do You Know Natalie Wood? …. Natalie, you have a new suggested
connection to review’.
Whether the question and
invitation are abstract, literary or philosophical I am unqualified to say.
However, it gives me a chance to complain about the unending stream of spam
telephone text messages I am receiving in the weeks before the 09 April Israel
general election from people who know nothing about me; care yet less and seek
my opinion solely to boost their poll ratings.
Although irritating, it is
not half as annoying as understanding that the major parties and their leaders suffer
from chronic cronyism and are convinced that being a ‘centrist’ means pleasing
only those who live in the country’s fashionable and densely-populated centre! Believe
me. I can’t boast a Tel Aviv zip code, so I am nothing!
Meanwhile as l await a
response from the recently formed Blue and White Party about a possible
pre-election English language event in Haifa, I may report that a tentative
offer to help arrange a small meeting closer to home was all but laughed out of
court.
Here, I must remind Yesh
Atid leader Yair Lapid that by his own admission he made a terrible ‘power drunk’ mess of
his initial Knesset role as finance minister and one of his worst blunders was
trying to halt the work on what became
the new railway station at Karmiel.
As commonsense self-evidently
prevailed, this means that if Lapid and senior colleagues ever do venture to
the frozen wastes beyond the Sharon Valley I could be in Haifa within an hour
to cheer them on. Oops! But I must not forget my place. As a mere Anglo in the
northern provinces, my vote must count for naught.
Further, the fates have
choreographed the rise of political ‘centrism’ in Israel in perfect formation
with that in the UK where the emerging Independent
Group of Members of Parliament is to be
headed, I understand, by Liverpool Wavertree‘s Luciana Berger.
The increasingly
distinguished Ms Berger (also ‘Mrs Alistair Goldsmith’) is a former Director of
Labour Friends of Israel but resigned from the Labour Party in February because
its increasingly
anti-Jewish atmosphere has now degenerated into "institutional
antisemitism".
But as constituency elected
MPs, Ms Berger and her colleagues have, I insist, a huge advantage over any of
their Israeli counterparts as they enjoy an intimate knowledge of both the
areas and the populations they represent.
So I end here by pointing
out that while one recent London Times newspaper promotion, ‘Making
Sense of the Centrists’ charged Westminster politicians with behaving like
animals, yet another has outlined ‘Why Clever People Make Stupid Mistakes’. I think sensible Israeli politicians should read it.
© Natalie Wood (31 March
2019)
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