elections
After I posted the last video with the ads from the national elections here in Israel, I got a mail from Joel Alan Katz of Religion and State in Israel saying that he and his wife had made a video of their voting experience this year. At the beginning of the video you see them each with their national ID cards and their voter registration cards. Then they go to the front desk where their names are checked off of the voter rolls. Each one takes their turn to go back behind the blind and then they come back out with their ballots in the little blue envelopes and put them in the ballot box.
Democracy in action, ladies and gentlemen.
For those of you tittering at how old fashioned this system is, I'd just like to point out that we have no questions as to whether or not the touch screens picked up the correct vote.
Thank you for sharing your video with us, Joel!
You can follow Joel on twitter @religion_state.
And be sure to read his weekly review of media coverage of all things Religion and State in Israel at http://religionandstateinisrael.blogspot.com/
This video is a bit old, since I took it on 11 Feb 2009, right after the national elections here. Still, I thought it might be interesting to some to see this busy intersection and highway entrance with its edge to edge political ads.
The white squares that look like pieces of paper with one, two or three letters on them are examples of what that party's ballot looks like. When you vote here, you walk behind a blinder (like a cardboard school diorama stand) where there is a box with square holes. Each hole holds a set of these white pieces of paper with one, two or three letters, representing a particular party. You pick the paper for your party and put it into the envelope that you were given at the sign in desk. You seal the envelope, and then put the envelope in the box back at the sign in desk.
Today is national election day in Israel, and the weather for the day seems like something right out of a Hollywood movie. There must be some sort of meaning in this. If it were a book, these rain drops would be foreshadowing something. Before you jump to conclusions and assume that the foreshadowing would be something bad, though, remember that this is the rainy season in Israel, and Torah and Jewish tradition holds that rain during the right season is a huge blessing. So, Hollywood scary or Middle East folklore miracle? It's all a matter of personal interpretation.
In the world of politics in the here and now, it was an eventful day as well. The polls saw a very high turnout throughout the day, and the Likud and Kadima parties are racing neck and neck to the finish line.
At first glance it looks as if the people of Israel are battling between the Right Wing views of Bibi Netanyahu in Likud and the more Centrist views of Tzipi Livni and Kadima, but that only gives part of the picture. Many Israelis felt that none of the big three parties spoke for their interests and ideals, and so they voted for smaller parties that you won't hear about in the news. Some of those parties are ultra-Right Wing, but many are moderate and ultra-Left Wing parties. In all, total of 34 different parties submitted lists of candidates. Once the major parties' seats are decided, it will still be necessary to negotiate with the other parties, including the smallest parties who managed to get seats in the Knesset, in order to establish a government. In order to form a coalition the prospective Prime Minister will need 61 seats out of 120 to support him or her.
If this entire process seems a bit like voodoo to you, you are not alone. Many Israelis would like the system to be different, more transparent and more directly controlled by the voters themselves. Some Israelis point out that the State is young and we haven't quite got all the bugs worked out. Others point out that the process for electing the President in the US is at just as murky for the average voter.
