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Religious Zionist Party

Israeli political party


Israeli political party

FieldValue
nameReligious Zionist Party
logoReligious Zionist party logo 2022.svg
colorcode
chairmanBezalel Smotrich
foundersHanan Porat
Zvi Hendel
ideology{{ublclass=nowrap
Religious Zionism<ref name"Oren 2023"/
Religious conservatism<ref>{{cite newsauthor-lastSharonauthor-first=Jeremydate=10 July 2022title=Court rules online civil marriages valid, upending Israel's religious status quourl=https://www.timesofisrael.com/court-rules-online-civil-marriage%D7%93-valid-upending-israels-religious-status-quo/url-status=livework=The Times of Israellocation=Jerusalemissn=0040-7909oclc=1076401854archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230411160745/https://www.timesofisrael.com/court-rules-online-civil-marriage%D7%93-valid-upending-israels-religious-status-quo/archive-date=11 April 2023access-date=9 May 2023}}
Social conservatism<ref>{{cite newsauthor1-lastHoffmanauthor1-first=Gilauthor2-last=Sharonauthor2-first=Jeremydate=9 August 2019title=Ayelet Shaked tells "Post" about the dramatic turnaround in her careerurl=https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/political-affairs-ready-to-fight-on-the-right-598102url-status=livework=The Jerusalem Postissn=0792-822Xoclc=15700704archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230314113239/https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/political-affairs-ready-to-fight-on-the-right-598102archive-date=14 March 2023access-date=9 May 2023}}
Ultranationalism<ref name"Rosenberg 2022"/
Jewish supremacy<ref name"Rosenberg 2022"/
Anti-Arab racism<ref name"Oren 2023"/
Kahanism<ref name"Rosenberg 2022"/}}
positionFar-right
headquartersBeit HaShenhav Building, Jerusalem, Israel
website
countryIsrael
founded1998
dissolution2023
splitNational Religious Party
mergedNational Religious Party–Religious Zionism
seats1_titleMost MKs
seats17 (2022)
symbol
nationalNational Union (1999–2013)
The Jewish Home (2013–2019)
URWP (2019)
{{nowrapYamina (2019, 2020–2021)
religionOrthodox Judaism (Chardal)}}
native_name
affiliation1Otzma Yehudit (formerly)
Noam (formerly)
affiliation1_titleMember parties
secretary_generalOfir Sofer

Zvi Hendel |Religious Zionism |Religious conservatism |Social conservatism |Ultranationalism |Jewish supremacy |Anti-Arab racism | Factions: |Kahanism}}

The Jewish Home (2013–2019) URWP (2019) {{nowrap|Yamina (2019, 2020–2021) ||native_name = Noam (formerly) The Religious Zionist Party (), known as Tkuma () until 2021 and officially known as National Union–Tkuma (, he), was a far-right, ultra-nationalist, Jewish supremacist, and religious Zionist political party in Israel. In all the elections since its founding in 1998, the party had joined other factions and competed as part of a united list. In 2023, the Religious Zionist Party and The Jewish Home agreed to merge to become National Religious Party–Religious Zionism.

History

Tkuma was established by Hanan Porat and Zvi Hendel in 1998. The pair left the National Religious Party in reaction to the Wye River Memorandum. Almost immediately after the creation of Tkuma, it joined together with Moledet and Herut – The National Movement, to form the National Union, a right-wing coalition which won four seats in the 1999 elections, with only one of those seats going to Tkuma. These elections were a failure for the right-wing bloc, and were won by Ehud Barak, leaving the National Union and Tkuma in the opposition. In February 2000, Yisrael Beiteinu joined the National Union, alongside Tkuma, and the two parties joined Ariel Sharon's first government in 2001. One year later, Tkuma and the rest of the National Union left Sharon's government over disagreements over the handling of the Second Intifada. For the 2003 elections, the National Union kept its alliance with Yisrael Beiteinu, with its increased support helping to win seven seats for the entire list, and two for Tkuma. The party was included in Ariel Sharon's coalition, alongside Likud, Shinui, the National Religious Party, and Yisrael BaAliyah.

Because of tensions over the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip (Tkuma was ideologically opposed, and Hendel lived in the Gaza settlement of Ganei Tal), National Union ministers Binyamin Elon and Avigdor Lieberman were sacked, and the party left the coalition. However, the National Union was bolstered by the addition of Ahi, which had split off from the National Religious Party when they decided to remain in the coalition.

Before the 2006 elections, the alliance between the National Union and Yisrael Beiteinu was dissolved, and a new alliance between the National Union and the National Religious Party was formed, which won nine seats, two of which were allocated to Tkuma and taken by Hendel and Uri Ariel.

On 3 November 2008, ahead of the 2009 elections, Tkuma faced a crisis. The party itself announced that it would unite with Ahi, the National Religious Party, and Moledet, to form a new right-wing party, which was later named the Jewish Home. However, around half of the former Tkuma members later left the new party to re-establish Tkuma and rejoin the National Union alongside Moledet, Hatikva, and Eretz Yisrael Shelanu. In the elections themselves, the National Union got four seats, with Tkuma getting two seats.

Ahead of the 2013 elections, the National Union split, with all member parties except for Tkuma splitting off to form Otzma LeYisrael, leaving Tkuma as the only party left in the National Union. Tkuma proceeded to change its name to "National Union–Tkuma", appropriating the National Union name. The party opted to run as part of the Jewish Home list for the 2013 elections. The Jewish Home won 12 seats, four of which (Ariel, Ben-Dahan, Kalfa, and Strook) were members of Tkuma. The party decided to continue its alliance with the Jewish Home for the 2015 Knesset elections, taking the 2nd, 8th, 13th, and 17th spots on the joint list. The Jewish Home dropped to eight seats in that election.

Old logo utilized by the party as &quot;National Union&quot; until 2021

In 2019 Bezalel Smotrich took over party leadership, winning party elections in a landslide against Ariel. Ahead of the April 2019 elections, the party joined with the Jewish Home and Otzma Yehudit to create the Union of Right-Wing Parties, which won five seats in the elections, two of which went to National Union–Tkuma.

Ahead of the September 2019 elections, Tkuma and the Jewish Home agreed to form an alliance with the New Right, called Yamina, with Tkuma leader Smotrich receiving the third spot on the joint list.

Yamina officially split on 10 October 2019 into two Knesset factions – the New Right, and the Jewish Home–National Union. For the 2020 elections, Otzma Yehudit and The Jewish Home agreed on 20 December to run together, in an alliance later named the United Jewish Home. Smotrich was critical of the move, stating that it was unlikely that the alliance would pass the electoral threshold. Tkuma, The Jewish Home, and the New Right reformed Yamina on 15 January 2020. On 22 April 2020 it was reported that Yamina leader Naftali Bennett was now "considering all options" for Yamina's political future, including departing from Netanyahu's government, which had just agreed to a coalition government with the leader of the opposition Blue and White party, Benny Gantz, and joining the opposition. Bennett was said to be unhappy with the new coalition government's decision to hold back on the issue of judicial reform.

On 14 May 2020 The Jewish Home's only Knesset member, Rafi Peretz, ended his status as a member of Yamina, and agreed to join Netanyahu's new government as well. On 15 May, Tkuma, along with the New Right, split with Netanyahu and made the Yamina alliance a member of the opposition. On 17 May 2020 Bennett met with Gantz, who also succeeded him as defence minister, and declared that the Yamina party would be a member of the opposition, with its "head held high". Tkuma was renamed on 7 January,

In February 2021 the party agreed to run a shared list for the 2021 Knesset elections with Noam and Otzma Yehudit. The list ran under the Religious Zionist Party name and won six seats, four of which were filled by Religious Zionist Party members. On 14 June, after the swearing-in of the 36th government, MK Ofir Sofer split from the Likud faction and merged into the Religious Zionist Party, increasing the number of seats held by the party to seven. He had run during the election as part of the Likud list for Knesset, as a member of Atid Ehad party, using it as a shelf party (a dormant, but still-registered, party brought back into use).

The Religious Zionist Party, Noam and Otzma Yehudit submitted a single list on 14 September 2022 ahead of the 2022 Knesset elections, which saw the alliance win 14 seats. The parties split into three parties in the Knesset on 20 November 2022.

Ideology

The Religious Zionist Party is opposed to any territorial concessions to Palestinian or Syrian claims for land. Some members support the annexation of the entire West Bank, though the official policy of the Jewish Home parliamentary faction, of which the party was aligned between 2013 and 2019, only supports annexation of Area C of the West Bank, which makes up the 63% of land in the West Bank allocated to Israel in the Oslo Accords. The party is opposed to recognition of same-sex marriage on a religious basis. The party advocates for increased funding for Torah study and religious education. Jewish-American columnist David E. Rosenberg has stated that the Religious Zionist Party's "platform includes things like annexation of West Bank settlements, the expulsion of asylum-seekers, and political control of the judicial system". He further described the Religious Zionist Party as a political party "driven by Jewish supremacy and anti-Arab racism". The party has been assessed by The Middle East Journal as "militantly anti-Arab" and far-right.

Leaders

LeaderTook officeLeft office
Tkuma (political party)}}; color: white"1[[File:Hanan Porat (portrait).JPG70px]]Hanan Porat
Tkuma (political party)}}; color: white"2[[File:Zvi Hendel (portrait).JPG70px]]Zvi Hendel
Tkuma (political party)}}; color: white"3[[File:Yaakov Katz, February 2018 (6146) (cropped).jpg70px]]Ya'akov Katz
Tkuma (political party)}}; color: white"4[[File:Ariel uri-yehuda.jpg70px]]Uri Ariel
Religious Zionist Party}}; color: white"5[[File:Bezalel Smotrich (portrait).jpg70px]]Bezalel Smotrich

Election results

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–Status
1999Hanan PoratPart of the National Union(1999–2001)
(2001–2003)
2003Zvi Hendel1(2003–2004)
(2004–2006)
2006Part of the NU–NRP
2009Ya'akov KatzPart of the National Union
2013Uri ArielPart of the Jewish Home2
20152
Apr 2019Bezalel SmotrichPart of the URWP
Sep 2019Part of Yamina
2020
2021With Otzma Yehudit and Noam2
20223

Knesset members list

Knesset termSeatsMembers
2015–20192Uri Ariel, Bezalel Smotrich
20192Bezalel Smotrich, Ofir Sofer
2019–20202Bezalel Smotrich, Ofir Sofer
2020–20212Bezalel Smotrich, Ofir Sofer
2021–20225Bezalel Smotrich, Michal Waldiger, Simcha Rothman, Orit Strook, Ofir Sofer
2022–20237Bezalel Smotrich, Ofir Sofer, Orit Strook, Simcha Rothman, Michal Waldiger, Ohad Tal, Moshe Solomon, Zvi Sukkot (replaced Smotrich on 5 February 2023)

Notes

References

References

  1. (10 July 2022). "Court rules online civil marriages valid, upending Israel's religious status quo". [[The Times of Israel]].
  2. (9 August 2019). "Ayelet Shaked tells "Post" about the dramatic turnaround in her career". [[The Jerusalem Post]].
  3. (30 December 2018). "Election Polls: 6-14 Seats for Bennett and Shaked's New Right-wing Party, Labor Party Crashes". [[Haaretz]].
  4. (1 November 2022). "Israel elections: Netanyahu set for comeback with far right's help - partial results". BBC News.
  5. (23 March 2021). "Far-right party set to gain new influence after Israeli vote". [[Associated Press]].
  6. . (2 November 2022). ["Kahanism Won. Israel Is Now Closing in on a Right-wing, Religious, Authoritarian Revolution"](https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2022-11-02/ty-article-opinion/kahanism-won/00000184-3591-d636-a9ed-fdb1292d0000). *[[Haaretz]]*.
  7. (14 March 2021). "Israel Election Poll: Far-right Party Allied With Kahanists Gains a Seat at Netanyahu's Expense". [[Haaretz]].
  8. Boxerman, Aaron. (3 June 2021). "History made as Arab Israeli Ra'am party joins Bennett-Lapid coalition".
  9. Sharon, Jeremy. (25 March 2021). "Israel Elections: What is the Religious Zionist Party's agenda?". The Jerusalem Post.
  10. (2 November 2022). "Israel election: what could happen". euronews.
  11. "הציונות הדתית בראשות בצלאל סמוטריץ'".
  12. Hezki Baruch. (21 February 2019). ""Union of the Right-Wing Parties" submits Knesset list". [[Israel National News]].
  13. Magid, Jacob. (12 January 2020). "Is Rafi Peretz sinking his Jewish Home below the electoral threshold?". [[The Times of Israel]].
  14. "Tkuma (Revival: The First 50 Years) 22 Chapters".
  15. "הציונות הדתית בראשות בצלאל סמוטריץ'". Central Election Committee for the Knesset.
  16. (2022–2023). "King Bibi" and Israeli Illiberalism: Assessing Democratic Backsliding in Israel during the Second Netanyahu Era (2009–2021)". [[Middle East Institute]].
  17. (30 October 2022). "What Makes Israel's Far Right Different". [[Graham Holdings Company]].
  18. Hoffman, Gil. (7 January 2021). "'Post' poll shows mergers capable of bringing down Netanyahu". [[The Jerusalem Post]].
  19. (3 August 2023). "Religious Zionism and Jewish Home parties merge". Israel National News.
  20. "Parliamentary Groups in the Knesset".
  21. "Israeli Election Results- May 1999".
  22. "Factional and Government Make-Up of the Sixteenth Knesset".
  23. Shulman, Robin. (5 June 2004). "Sharon Fires Two Who Oppose Gaza Plan". The Washington Post.
  24. "Mergers and Splits Among Parliamentary Groups".
  25. Meranda, Amnon. (3 November 2008). "Right-wing parties unite".
  26. Selig, Abe. (24 December 2008). "Hatikva Party courts Tkuma as hard-line factions fracture". The Jerusalem Post.
  27. Ezra, Hezki. (20 December 2014). "Tekuma Decides: No Split from Jewish Home".
  28. Avi Lewis. (12 January 2015). "Jewish Home faction Tekumah selects Knesset candidates". The Times of Israel.
  29. (18 March 2015). "ועדת הבחירות המרכזית לכנסת ה-20 {{!}} תוצאות ארציות".
  30. Magid, Jacob. (14 January 2019). "Hardliner Smotrich wins race to lead influential Jewish Home sub-faction". [[The Times of Israel]].
  31. [[Staff writer]]. (20 June 2019). "Far-right Otzma Yehudit accuses Jewish Home of not honoring election pact". [[The Times of Israel]].
  32. Staff writer. (12 August 2019). "United Right to run under name 'Yemina'". [[Arutz Sheva]].
  33. Staff. (29 July 2019). "New Right, United Right reach final agreement on joint run".
  34. Wootliff, Raoul. (10 October 2019). "Yamina party officially splits into New Right, Jewish Home-National Union". [[The Times of Israel]].
  35. Tercatin, Rossella. (20 December 2019). "Religious Zionist Bayit Yehudi and far-right Otzma Yehudit to run together". [[The Jerusalem Post]].
  36. (31 December 2019). "Jewish Home-Otzma Yehudit alliance reveals new name, logo". [[The Times of Israel]].
  37. Magid, Jacob. (31 December 2019). "Smotrich says he won't join Jewish Home-Otzma Yehudit merger "at any cost"". [[The Times of Israel]].
  38. Staff writer. (15 January 2020). "Bennett, Peretz, Smotrich agree to joint run without Ben Gvir". [[Arutz Sheva]].
  39. Wootliff, Raoul. (22 April 2020). "Netanyahu speaks with Bennett as Yamina considers joining unity government".
  40. Ben Porat, Ido. (15 May 2020). "Rabbi Rafi Peretz signs coalition agreement with the Likud". [[Arutz Sheva]].
  41. Weiss, Yoni. (14 May 2020). "Minister Rafi Peretz Leaves Yamina to Join New Government". [[Hamodia]].
  42. Magid, Jacob. (17 May 2020). "Yamina chair says party heading to opposition with 'head held high'". [[The Times of Israel]].
  43. Hoffman, Gil. (20 January 2021). "Bennett's Yamina party formally splits".
  44. [[Staff writer]]. (3 February 2021). "Religious Zionist, Otzma Yehudit parties to run together". [[Arutz Sheva]].
  45. (6 April 2021). "As anti-gay MKs sworn in, activists fear 'step backwards' on LGBT rights". [[The Times of Israel]].
  46. (14 June 2021). "Official: Ofir Sofer returns to the Religious Zionist Party". Srugim.
  47. (14 June 2021). "Ophir Sofer returns, Yamina waiting for Shai Maimon". Arutz 7.
  48. Carrie Keller-Lynn. (14 September 2022). "National Unity, Religious Zionism and Yisrael Beytenu submit final candidate lists". [[The Times of Israel]].
  49. (20 November 2022). "After joint run, Religious Zionism party splits into three factions". [[The Times of Israel]].
  50. Ahren, Raphael. (12 March 2015). "From annexation to right of return: What the parties say about the Palestinians". The Times of Israel.
  51. (23 May 2017). "The Elections in Israel 2015". Routledge.
  52. Nachshoni, Kobi. (3 October 2018). "Religious-Zionist rabbi: LGBT culture is a 'spreading sickness'".
  53. "About the party".
  54. (5 February 2023). "Far-right Settler Leader Becomes MK Under Law to Expand Size of Government". [[Haaretz]].
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