Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |||
Olmert's coalition under threat from Labor | |||
2007-05-05 | |||
![]() Labour, in the midst of its own power struggle, is the largest partner in Olmert's coalition government and its withdrawal could force new elections. Israel's next general election is not due until 2010. The head of Labour, Defence Minister Amir Peretz, is considering stepping down from his post in response to the Lebanon war report.
Some coalition members have suggested that they would stick by Olmert because they might lose significant parliamentary clout if fresh elections were held now. Olmert's approval ratings have plummeted into the single digits and his deputy, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, this week joined calls for his removal. Labour party member Ofir Pines and several other Labour leaders said that Olmert must go, even if it means early elections. "We will make an effort to build a new coalition and a new government. If we won't be able to do so, we will have to have early elections," Pines told Reuters. "It is not the best option but it's a better option than to stay with the present government." Danny Yatom, also a candidate for Labour party leadership, said that as long
Meanwhile Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said on Friday that he had no intention of resigning despite a mass rally that called on him to step down over a scathing Lebanon war report. "The prime minister does not intend to resign, these are speculations," Olmert's spokeswoman Miri Eisin told AFP.
Late Thursday between 150,000 and 200,000 demonstrators, according to police and organiser estimates, gathered in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square calling on Olmert to quit after a government inquiry blasted him for serious failure during last year's war against Lebanon's Hezbollah. It was the first mass demonstration calling for Olmert's ouster since the report was published on Monday. | |||
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Cabinet Approves Expanded Land Operations in Lebanon |
2006-08-09 |
(IsraelNN.com) The security cabinet has approved at this time an expanded military campaign in southern Lebanon. Most of the ministers in the cabinet expressed support for the decision, with no votes against it. Ministers Ofir Pines, Eli Yishai and Shimon Peres abstained from the vote. Update From Lebanon (IsraelNN.com) IDF forces in the area of Bint Jbeil killed at least 20 Hizbullah terrorist guerillas in the past 24 hours and located command post, which later was targeted from the air. The Air Force carried out more than 200 missions in the past 24 hours, striking Hizbullah offices and rocket launching areas. |
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Israel-Palestine | |
Labour MP chosen as Israel interior minister | |
2004-12-26 | |
JERUSALEM Prominent Labour MP Ofir Pines said yesterday he would become interior minister in Israel's new coalition government, set to enforce Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan to evacuate the Gaza Strip. If confirmed, the 43-year-old dove will take on the most important of the five cabinet porfolios earmarked for Labour in a new coalition line-up with the right-wing Likud party.
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