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February 26, 1988 - Image 41

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-02-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Coll for

AN IMMEDIATE APPOINTMENT

Counseling Services For
Adults, Adolescents, Children

rERFECT INZI‘D or
/IS
FORM, FUNCTION- AND TASTE •

sociologists, who have been
examining electoral patterns
ever since Israel was
established, say they have
found that the lower educated
tend to vote Likud or other
right-wing parties.
Some participants at the
Truman Institute conference
put it the other way round —
that a higher percentage of
Likud voters are less well
educated and a higher percen-
tage of Labor voters are bet-
ter educated.
But the researchers suggest
that a majority of Sephardim
vote Likud because they like
the Likud's more nationalis-
tic policies on land and treat-
ment of the Arabs — rather
than because of their lower
education — for both
psychological and historic
reasons.
Strangely enough, the
harder line, more na-
tionalistic and anti Arab at-
titudes of Israeli Sephardim
do not seem to be mirrored
among Sephardi Jewish com-
munities abroad.
In Europe and America, the
Sephardi communities and
congregations appear to tend
toward the more liberal wings
of the body politic, and are
more active in seeking con-
tacts and cooperation with
the Arabs — often precisely
for the reasons that "We have,
in the past, lived among them
and we know them better."

Peres, Rabin
Losing Support

Tel Aviv — A plurality of
Israelis favor Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres to be
the next prime minister and
Yitzhak Rabin to continue as
defense minister, according to
a poll published last week in
the Israeli newspaper,

Maariv.

Peres and Rabin, members
of the Labor Party, have both
lost public support since a
similar poll was taken last
November. The popularity of
Yitzhak Shamir, the current
premier and Likud bloc
leader, also declined slightly.
Rabin and Commerce and
Industry Minister Ariel
Sharon, a Herut hard-liner,
were favored by only small
minorities to lead the
government.
In November, 42.7 percent
of the respondents considered
Peres the best candidate for
the office of prime minister.
By January, his support was
down to 37.7 percent.
Shamir went from 18 per-
cent in November to 17 per-
cent in January. Sharon was
up from 4.7 to 6.2 percent and
Rabin from 3.1 to 4.3.

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