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Israel’s new Labor Party leader pulls out of unity government

“The Labor Party is starting over,” says Merav Michaeli, who just won the primary.

Israel's new Labor Party leader Merav Michaeli, at a polling station in Tel Aviv on Jan. 24, 2021. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.
Israel’s new Labor Party leader Merav Michaeli, at a polling station in Tel Aviv on Jan. 24, 2021. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.

Newly elected Labor Party leader Merav Michaeli announced Monday that her party is pulling out of Israel’s unity government, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Michaeli, who won the party primaries on Sunday with 77 percent of the vote, ordered Economy Minister Amir Peretz and Labor and Social Services Minister Itzik Shmuli, both members of Labor, to resign.

The vote followed the resignation last month of Peretz, who announced that he would be stepping down after the party had its worst showing ever in the last election, and after having lost the support of many Labor voters when he broke his campaign promise not to join a coalition headed by Netanyahu.

“The Labor Party is leaving the corrupt Netanyahu-[Benny] Gantz government,” Michaeli said in a statement. “I told Peretz and Shmuli they must resign immediately. The Labor Party is starting over.”

This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.

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