Israeli Election r.fAMWO:NAMV;;; Campaign moments, 1999: Labor candidate Ehud Barak, top center, makes a point; top right, Ze'ev Begins right-wing campaign made little headway; bottom right, Azmi Beshara was the • first Israeli Arab candidate for prime minister; Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, bottom center, strikes an ecological pose; the Center Party of Yitzhak Mordechai, bottom left, faded and faded. Netanyahu kept the loyalty of Shas Party leaders Age Deri and Rabbi Ova is Yosef LARRY DERFNER Israel Correspondent Jerusalem f the May 17 election follows the consistent findings of Israeli pub- lic opinion polls, the next Knesset will be even more frac- tious than the outgoing one. However a predicted drop in the right's strength could soften the left-right division that has persisted for generations. Further, if Labor candidate Ehud Barak is elected prime minister, he could form a government strictly of the left and center without including religious parties or possibly Arab ones. On the other hand, if Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is re-elected, he would need a collection of religious and ethnic par- ties now at each other's throats. The pollsters for Israel's two largest newspapers, Yediot Aharonot and Maariv, stress that they only take a "picture" of public opinion at the time of the poll. Still, the surveys reflect what many commentators have predict- ed for weeks. They say: • Not one, but two Russian immi- grant parties will sit in the 15th Knesset. Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael Beitenu (Israel Is Our Home) would become a new small party, one in con- stant competition with Natan Sharansky's Yisrael B'Aliyah (Israel Is Rising) for the allegiance of Russian voters. The two are already political rivals and sniping at one another. • Shas, the Sephardic Orthodox party, will retain its 10 seats. Its assaults on the judicial system have escalated since the criminal conviction of its I 5/14 1999 24 Detroit Jewish News Photos by the Associated Press can Seats The infighting in this Knesset is a warmup for what's to come. leader Arye Deri for accepting bribes. • Tommy Lapid's Shinui (Change) party would gain as many as six seats. Before the campaign, the then-veteran journalist was the most provocative presence on the talk-show circuit. Those talents are focused against the haredim (fervently religious). In return, the haredim have regularly accused Lapid, a Holocaust survivor, of "anti- Semitism," and he has reportedly received death threats. • The Center parry would establish itself as a considerable force. Its top three — former Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai, former military Chief of General Staff Amnon Lipkin- Shahak and former Finance Minister Dan Meridor — share deep animosities toward Netanyahu, their former boss. • On the right, the Likud will gain fewer seats than Labor while the new National Union, led by prime minister- ial candidate Benny Begin, will debut as only a small party. And old warhorse Rafael Eitan's Tsomet (Crossroads) party will be out of the Knesset. The Third Way, champion of the Golan Heights and the Golan settlers, would likewise be gone. Some other outspo- ken, veteran leaders of the ideological right — West Bank Rabbi Benny Elon, Gaza settler leader Zvi Hendel — could lose their seats. "The Israeli public has been steadily losing its ideological commitment, its willingness to fight for national causes," said Yisrael Harel, a former chairman of YESHA, the West Bank and Gaza settlers' council. Oddly enough, he added, "It was Netanyahii who broke the ideological back of the right, not the left. Netanyahu did it when he signed the Hebron accord and then the Wye accord," which relinquished West Bank land the biblical heartland — to the Palestinians. Ehud Barak, if elected prime minis- ter, could put together a Knesset major- ity among his One Israel coalition (lArhich includes Labor, David Levy's Gesher, and Meimad, the moderate Orthodox party), the left-wing Meretz, the Center party, Yisrael B'Aliyah, Shinui, One People (led by Histadrut union chief Amir Peretz) and the Pnina Rosenbloom party (named for the Israeli sex symbol running on a femi- nist platform). The last two in the list are likely to gain a handful of seats in the 120-member parliament. This secular, left-center alignment would have but one ethnic party. Left- wing Arab parties could bring this coali- tion a muscular majority of up to about 70 seats, but that's unlikely, said retiring Labor Knesset Member and past Knesset Speaker Shevach Weiss. Barak, he said, wants a broader coalition. "Otherwise, all the parties represent- ing Israelis who consider themselves `oppressed' and 'dispossessed' will be concentrated in the opposition," he said. "This would raise animosities to a truly dangerous level. The only way to overcome it is with a broad coalition." On the other hand, if Netanyahu won, he would be forced to form a broad and seemingly irreconcilable coalition with the Likud, Yisrael Beitenu, Shas and the Ashkenazi Haredi United Torah Judaism. II