Sunday, September 04, 2011

Biggest rally in Israel's history presses PM
By Ari Rabinovitch
TEL AVIV Sat Sep 3, 2011 5:56pm EDT

TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands marched Saturday for lower living costs in the largest such rally in Israel's history, bolstering a social change movement and mounting pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to take on economic reform.

Protest leaders called it "the moment of truth" for the grassroots movement that has swollen since July from a cluster of student tent-squatters into a countrywide mobilization of Israel's middle class.

"An entire generation wants a future," read one banner as demonstrators flooded the streets of Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and cities throughout Israel, shouting "the people demand social justice."

Netanyahu has warned he would not be able to satisfy all the protesters' demands, ranging from tax cuts, to expansion of free education and bigger government housing budgets.

Organizers said over 450,000 people took part in the demonstrations. Police put the number at least 300,000.

Protests on that scale in Israel, with a population of 7.7 million, are usually held over issues of war and peace.

"Tonight is the pinnacle moment of a historic protest," Amir Rochman, 30, an activist from Israel's Green Party said.

"Israel will no longer be the same," Itzik Shmuli, head of the National Student Union and one of the protest leaders said at the rally. "Our new Israel demands real change in the priorities of its government."

Though the turnout was lower than the ambitious one million some had hoped for, commentators said the movement had made its mark on Israel by catapulting the economy onto a political agenda long-dominated by security concerns and diplomacy.

Social media also played a role in the Israeli protests, inspired partly by the impact of Arab Spring demonstrations.

Since it began, the popular movement has upstaged a diplomatic face-off with the Palestinians for U.N. recognition of statehood and has posed the greatest challenge yet to Netanyahu, halfway into his term.

"HERE TO STAY"

Although Israel enjoys a low 5.5 unemployment rate and a growing economy, business cartels and wage disparities have kept many from feeling the benefit. Many protesters come from the middle class which bares a heavy tax burden and sustains the conscript military.

The weekly protests prompted Netanyahu to set up a committee to explore a broad revamp of economic policies. The government has also announced housing and consumer market reforms.

Protest leaders have indicated they will pause demonstrations in the coming weeks until the committee submits its conclusions. But Shmuli said at the rally that the movement was "here to stay."

"Priorities must be set, one thing comes at the expense of another," Roni Sofer, a spokesman for Netanyahu, told Israel Radio Saturday, adding that the government would not break its budget.

Netanyahu's governing coalition faces no immediate threat, but the protests have underscored the potential electoral impact of a middle class rallying under a banner of "social justice."

7 comments:

Alexander Münch said...


Midnight,

Please note that today's rally was the 4th weekend ... During the same period of time X Egyptians died and Y were badly wounded in Cairo's Tahrir Sq. Among them more then 1600 ! lost at least one eye!

Huh?! What you say? Huh!?...
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Alexander Münch said...


Tel Aviv Rally 3 Sep 2011
PHOTOS :-
http://goo.gl/9OcbT
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midnight rider said...

I'm not making a judgement on them, Alex, just reporting them the same way we reported the auserity measure protests in France and England and others. At least yours can be done without torching buildings and opening a can of whoopass on innocents etc.

As for Egypt, I'd also point to Syria, where Assad and his goons are engaged in full out war against the protestors. As bad or worse than what happened in Libya yet nary a call for the Responsibility to Protect from our hypocritical leadership and media. And that extends to all the Western powers, not just the U.S.

It also does not mean I'm in favor of action in Syria, just stating the facts as I see them.

And besides, if it affects Israel, one way or another it will also affect the U.S.

By the way, your link did not work for me.

Alexander Münch said...


Here is the Link once again (Rotter):-

http://rotter.net/forum/scoops1/16707.shtml
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Anonymous said...

social "justice"...stinks to high Heaven of "progressive liberalism"....

How will this new government mandate be paid for?

Will they cut defense? Will they cut spending on some other worthwhile endeavor?

You have to have a country FIRST before you can have "social justice".

Be careful what you ask for.....you might just get it.

jeppo said...

"Netanyahu has warned he would not be able to satisfy all the protesters' demands, ranging from tax cuts, to expansion of free education and bigger government housing budgets."

When future historians write the epitaph for the West (and Israel), they will no doubt conclude that we were done in by our own insatiable greed.

Some people blame politicians for the fiscal mess we're in. Not me. Politicians are only responding to the irrational demands of their constituents. Like these Israeli protesters, who want lower taxes AND more free education AND more government housing. Paid for by whom I wonder?

Memo to the GOP: tax cuts aren't conservative, balanced budgets are. If a future America is going to be anything other than an economic basketcase, then steep tax hikes AND massive spending cuts are both essential to get your fiscal house in order.

And that includes massive cuts to the Department of Defense. Especially the DoD. Ask yourself, are Americans getting a good deal out of the $700 billion plus they shove down the Pentagon's insatiable maw every year?

Unless you think that empowering a heroin-dealing kleptocracy in Afghanistan, an Iranian puppet regime in Iraq, and now bloody al Qaeda in Libya is a good deal, then no.

Borrowing hundreds of billions a year from China to make the world safe for Chinese economic domination is probably not a very good idea either. But, along with empowering Islamists, making "diversity" a higher goal than protecting the lives of the troops, feminizing and homosexualizing the once-masculine military, and NOT guarding the Mexican border, that seems to be the DoD's primary function these days.

Epaminondas said...

This is the same as protesting for more rain.

Lower Prices?

And if the govt mandates lower rents and real estate costs, and the owner make less, etc around the horn, when lower incomes result what then?