Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli Labor Party leader Michaeli to quit politics

“I am convinced that Israel will go to elections in 2024,” said Merav Michaeli.

Labor Party leader Merav Michaeli holds a press conference in Tel Aviv, Dec. 7, 2023. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.
Labor Party leader Merav Michaeli holds a press conference in Tel Aviv, Dec. 7, 2023. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.

Merav Michaeli, the head of Israel’s opposition Labor Party, will retire from political life after serving out her current term in the Knesset, she announced on Thursday.

“The State of Israel is currently in a major crisis. ... Israel needs to have a new beginning, a restart. And for that to happen, elections must be held, and I am convinced that Israel will go to elections in 2024,” Michaeli told reporters at a press conference in Tel Aviv.

“I am responsible for the situation of the party today, and I do not plan to stand in the primaries or for a place on the next Knesset list. I will be here to do everything to hand over the helm of leadership for the benefit of rebuilding the party,” she continued.

The Labor Party intends to hold a primary in four months, “in the hope that the war will end by then and the hostages will return home,” according to Michaeli.

The party, which historically dominated Israeli politics, received only 175,992 votes in last year’s general election, barely passing the 3.25% electoral threshold (four Knesset mandates).

However, if an election were held now, the Labor Party would fall below the threshold with just 2.2% of the vote, a survey published by the Maariv daily concluded late last month.

Former Labor lawmaker and public security minister Omer Bar-Lev told reporters in August that the left-wing party has “finished its historic role” in the Israeli political landscape and called on Michaeli to resign.

“It began when the party decided to lower its security flag to half-mast. Since then, we have been in decline,” lamented the former commander of the Israel Defense Forces’ elite General Staff Reconnaissance Unit.

Last month, Michaeli slammed the global political left for being “complicit” in Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre of more than 1,200 people in southern Israel, saying “something very bad is happening on the left.

“It became very clear in this attack that people who consider themselves to be democratic, progressive, are supporting a totalitarian terror regime that oppresses women [and] the LGBTQ+ community,” she said.

“He informed and entertained generations of fans with a theatrical and unapologetic style that was uniquely his own,” the New York Yankees stated.
Miriam Adelson’s “commitment to the security and unity of our people is more vital than ever during these challenging times,” said Elan Carr, CEO of the Israeli-American Council.
The suspect opened fire after being confronted by officers, prompting a lockdown of parts of the National Mall and the White House.
The measure, scheduled for a finance committee hearing, directs funding to Jewish Collaborative Services for the fiscal year 2026-27.
“The focus of our county work to protect synagogues and other vulnerable institutions should remain with our Police Department and Hate Crimes Prevention Program,” Steuart Pittman stated.
The private university stated that the student senate “is using its platform to target fellow students in a misguided attempt to hold those students responsible for the acts of governments.”