Eizenkot’s Political Dilemma: A Broader Alliance Could Cost Him Votes
News 12 reporter Daphna Liel says opposition leaders in the center-left bloc are facing a strategic trap as they quietly explore political blocs and possible mergers before the elections. In her analysis, the effort to build a large united slate may look logical on paper, but it ignores how some voters react negatively to specific party leaders.
Liel places former cabinet member and reserve IDF chief of staff Gadi Eizenkot at the center of that dilemma. She says many Israelis see him as someone who can appeal to broad and varied segments of the public, including voters who are not traditionally aligned with the left or center.
According to Liel, Eizenkot’s main strength is that he can speak to undecided voters looking for a security-minded and statesmanlike figure, rather than a rigid party list. She argues that overly mechanical efforts to merge the bloc could backfire and erase that advantage among those audiences.
The danger, she says, is that aligning the bloc to optimize seat counts could end up costing precious votes. As she put it, “Even if it arranges the bloc one way or another, there are people who will not be able to vote for Eizenkot if he joins with Bennett and Lapid.”
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