Like March itself Benjamin Netanyahu blew into
Washington last week with everyone roaring about the fear of fallout. The outrage and the impact was just
that – fear. He and the speech he gave went out like a lamb, with a nonplussed
President, and US-Israel relations while somewhat bruised at the moment – still
intact. For now.
Netanyahu’s platform operates on two parts both at home and abroad – fear mongering scenarios and maintaining an unmoving status quo on security and the economy rather than initiating change. But there may just be a cost to that.
Many are still scratching their heads as to
the point of that visit. It was clear Netanyahu diverges from the US approach to negotiations with Iran. However it’s also pretty clear that the
security service in Israel disagrees with Netanyahu. Upon his return he was
welcomed to tens
of thousands protesting in Tel Aviv last Saturday evening. Former Mossad head Meir Dagan and others in
Israel’s security establishment demanded a return to normalcy and responsible leadership.
Each speaker criticized Netanyahu’s tenure of non-action on domestic issues and
intractability on pressing security concerns. The “Commanders for Israel’s
Security” called for a refocusing on the country’s domestic priorities from the
failing economy for the middle class earners, affordable housing shortages and
stabilizing relations with the Palestinians.
What was clear from the rally and the
voiced frustrations is that the message Netanyahu is bringing, be it in
Washington or at home in Israel is one that isn’t necessarily working. It’s not
resonating with the Israeli population and increasingly not with Jewish
communities in the Diaspora
as well.
But why? It worked before... Because eventually even with a clear position you have to initiate and
engage to create change and not stand on the sidelines. Like children on a
playground you can’t influence, much less control a situation from outside of
the sandbox – you have to get in, move around and yes sometimes get dirty. In other words you need to steer your boat out
of the harbour sometimes.
For Israeli’s taking calculated risks is
hardwired into our DNA. There are always threats, however Israelis move forward anyway – whether its to return to a synagogue after
a terrorist shooting or dusting yourself off to go about business after each
air raid siren. Because the right to
live equally and peacefully is exercised daily in spite of risk. To negotiate and
have a backup plan is how the Israeli modus operandi has always survived and
even thrived. Its part of the Israeli makeup – to be bold, take a chance
whether you’re a high-tech start up, an Israeli Arab challenging the national
question of equality, or a young
politician trying to stop a bill from being passed that will drain the
nation’s resources in favour of settlements in the West Bank. Because its worth
the risk to get a better deal.
Strangely, Netanyahu has never operated
that way. In fact he’d rather hold all the cards and step out of the ring
altogether. The hardliner coalition he enjoyed in his previous term by creating
the largest government in history meant that he had no opposition, no critics and
no alternative. This also resulted in no peace initiative, no drive to improve
the economy and no challenge to the growing influence of the religious right. His current term was cut
short for exactly that reason – neither HaTnua under Tzipi Livni or Yesh Atid
under Yair Lapid could tolerate such a push of power when it came to undermining
the core values of equality of citizenship in a democracy – even if that
democracy is the State of Israel.
And its that intolerance to such tactics of
maintaining power, of fear mongering and inaction when change is
so desperately needed that became the beginning of Netanyahu’s power base
unraveling. His hold in next week’s elections is strongly being challenged for
all of these reasons. As some have said a “six year itch” with Netanyahu may
certainly be on the table with Israeli voters.
Over on this side of the world, Benjamin
Netanyahu’s well-known affinity with Stephen Harper (one could even go so far
to call it a “bromance”) is rooted in part because they hold the same ideals
when it comes to power and how to hold on to it. I dare to say power and not
leadership here because for each their vision is to be able to stay governing
the public through messages that the ship in the
harbour that is safe and secure for now is lost without them.
However that’s not what a boat’s meant to
do.
Be it the environment or the economy in Canada – keeping the boat docked means that it’s getting slammed into the
pier and starting to crack. Our environmental policies are falling so far
behind in the name of oil industry that its unlikely we will catch up unless we make
drastic changes soon. Canadians hold the beauty
and bounty of this country in high regard and so should our leadership.
Looking to the economy – staying the
course hasn’t
helped much. Falling oil prices have triggered growth rate cuts already in
the first quarter of this year. Balancing the budget will not be enough to convince voters
of who is holding the purse in 2015. New York Times columnist Paul
Krugman argues that no one really understands debt and that we need more not
less debt on the public books to get the economy moving or else it will
stagnate i.e. nothing will change if we keep shifting the budget lines on
what we owe ourselves and cutting back on what makes an economy and a society
healthy. So is staying the course and fear of debt really what we need? Can’t we trust ourselves to spend a little
more to gain a lot? Does balancing the deficit now really matter that much in the bigger picture?
Then there is Bill C-51. Responding to
the changing and threatening landscape of terrorism by increasing the
surveillance rights of security institutions without question. At the same time its risking the
privacy rights of individuals to be questioned under new legislation. The bill is testing
not only the boundaries of freedom and civil liberties, but ratcheting up the fear
mongering tactics at home. The threat – that has come under the banner of ISIS
and Islamic fundamentalism is unleashing a new cultural vitriol on the political
landscape.
Rising intolerance and ignorance is
beginning to stain the rich fabric that makes Canada the modern multicultural society
that it is. Justin
Trudeau’s speech this week highlights the fears that are being stirred and
unexamined as a result of these new legislative directions. Most importantly he emphasized the need for liberties to be protected for all Canadians. He explored the fact that while we are striving for a truly diverse and free society here in Canada,
we have had an evolution of that value develop over time into hard won policies
and practices that we can be proud of, with an honest look at the past. A national conversation on safety should not boil down to the wearing of the niqab. That being said, while the need to examine the
efficacy of our security in Canada certainly must be done - is it through
new legislation or refinancing
the already existing backlog in our security services?
In short we are less safe when we prevent
Canadian citizens from wearing their faith publicly than when we include it as part of
an evolving Canadian society built on liberty and inclusion of the other. We
are less safe when we cut back on the resources we need and increase
legislation that limits our freedoms. Stephen Harper should call his friend
Bibi for a check-in on cultural exclusionist practices – he should know. The
Israeli government fell in a large part due to the attempt to pass a Jewish
Nation State law that would in fact limit the rights of its Arab citizens. The
result – the newly formed Arab party ticket may just form the official
opposition in next week’s elections for the first time in the country's history.
We risk everything when we do
nothing to initiate change for the better.
So if the cost of fear politics and
stagnancy are pretty clear I must ask of these politicians - What is the
advantage of steering a ship that doesn’t go anywhere? Next week’s elections in
Israel will give us an indication of what happens to an electorate when you
place power hand in hand with fear. Leadership means helming a ship that sails
through change. Propping up fear eventually leaves you alone at the landing.
A ship is always safe at shore – but that’s not what it’s built for.
-Albert Einstein
Post Script: At the time of this posting Israeli polls showed 24 seats for the joint ticket of Livni-Herzog for Hamachaneh HaTziyoni, 21 for Netanyahu and the Likud and 13 seats for the Arab joint ticket making it the third largest party.
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