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Israel: Fringe Parties Hope to Woo Israel Voters

Associated Press

The Guardian

Wednesday 01 Jan 2003

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JERUSALEM (AP) - A driver speeding past two dozen cyclists from the
pro-marijuana Green Leaf Party shouts, ``Hey, you giving out free
samples?'' A bus driver gives a wave and a honk.

The cyclists, wearing T-shirts emblazoned with a marijuana leaf, pedaled
through the city to draw attention to one of their many tenets, ditching
cars for bicycles. It was part election campaign, part environmental
activism and part lark.

A month before parliamentary elections, Green Leaf is among several
fringe parties competing for the protest vote from Israelis unwilling to
choose hardliners but frustrated by dovish parties after more than two
years of fighting with the Palestinians.

They woo voters with campaigns on the weakened economy, social ills and
the environment, not plans for peace.

Green Leaf just missed the 1.5 percent of the vote needed to enter
parliament in 1999, but polls predict it might get two of 120 seats in
the parliament, or Knesset, this time. The party champions legalizing
marijuana and the right to hold all-night dance parties without
interference from police making drug busts.

Fringe movements give voters a way out of agonizing choices, said Shmuel
Sandler, a political science professor at Tel Aviv University.

``People are very disappointed by the peace process, and it's sort of an
escape,'' Sandler said. ``They are frustrated with the left, but they're
not going to vote for the right, so this is a nice way of getting out of
this dilemma.''

Among the protest parties is the Men's Rights in the Family Party, which
advocates strengthening a man's say in child custody battles and
decisions over abortions.

Yisrael Acheret, or Another Israel, is led by a 26-year-old law student
who wants to replace politicians with academics, business people and
professionals.

The group also wants to end subsidies for ultra-Orthodox Jews, who are
exempt from military service and often depend on state handouts as they
devote their lives to seminary study, and Jewish settlers.

The momentum, for now, is with Green Leaf.

Biking through Jerusalem, Green Leaf activists handed stickers to
cheering motorists. Stopping at a gas station, they unfurled a pot-leaf
banner near a police jeep, and one cyclist got a high-five from a
policewoman.

The party's chairman, Boaz Wachtel, 44, is no typical hippie: He was the
assistant military attache at the Israeli embassy in Washington in the
1980s, and served on a team of Israeli representatives to former
President Ronald Reagan's space-based anti-missile shield program.

Wachtel, also a longtime proponent of alternative drug-abuse treatments,
said the group of activists only reluctantly entered politics. ``We're
not politicians by choice, but out of necessity. In order to change
things we had to jump into the political swamp in Israel.''

His desk at the party's Tel Aviv headquarters is covered with
newspapers, including a weekend magazine with a photo of him with a
green mint leaf stuck to his forehead. Posters on the wall have the
slogan ``ballot to freedom'' with illustrations of pot leaves and
hearts.

Wachtel believes that so-called soft drugs like marijuana are not
gateways to hard drugs like cocaine; such addiction, he said, is the
outcome of larger social problems - poverty, violence and sexual abuse.

He says legalizing cannabis would free up money and time for the
government to treat hardcore drug addicts and fight more important
problems like violent crime.

The Green Leaf headquarters is near Tel Aviv's cafe and shop-lined
Sheinkin Street, the heartland of Israel's anti-establishment youth
culture, which feeds much of the support for the smaller parties.

Alegria Sabag, 19, said Green Leaf will speak up for young Israelis,
especially on issues of education. Sabag has no money to go to college,
and is resentful that young Israelis have to serve in the military but
get little financial assistance for school.

``Green Leaf represents the young voice,'' she said, at work in a
dance-music filled clothing store.


 

 

 

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