Wednesday, October 23, 2013

NIR BARAKAT WINS 2ND TERM AS JERUSALEMS MAYOR

KING JESUS IS COMING FOR US ANY TIME NOW. THE RAPTURE. BE PREPARED TO GO.

ISRAEL YOU BETTER PROTECT JERUSALEM FOR JESUS WHEN HE COMES TO LITERALLY RULE IN JERUSALEM FOREVER-VERY SHORTLY NOW.

ISAIAH 9:6-7
6 For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given:(JESUS 1ST COMING) and the government shall be upon his shoulder:(JESUS 2ND COMING AS RULING KING FROM JERUSALEM FOREVER AT THE END OF THE 7 YEAR TRIBULATION) and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.
7 Of the increase of his (JESUS) government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David,( IN JERUSALEM) and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will perform this.

PSALMS 48:1-3
1  A Song and Psalm for the sons of Korah. Great is the LORD, and greatly to be praised in the city of our God, in the mountain of his holiness.(JERUSALEM)
2  Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth, is mount Zion,(JERUSALEM) on the sides of the north, the city of the great King.(JESUS-MESSIAH-KING-GOD OF ALL ON EARTH)
3  God is known in her palaces for a refuge.

PSALMS 46:4-5
4  There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God,(JERUSALEM) the holy place of the tabernacles of the most High.(JERUSALEM)
5  God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved: God shall help her, and that right early.

HEBREWS 11:10
10  For he looked for a city which hath foundations,(JERUSALEM) whose builder and maker is God.

Jerusalem mayor faces a council as fragmented as his city

Nir Barkat may have won a second term in office, but his party holds only four seats out of 31 at City Hall

October 23, 2013, 2:46 pm 0-The Times of Israel
Jerusalem's City Hall (photo credit: Abir Sultan/Flash90)
Jerusalem's City Hall (photo credit: Abir Sultan/Flash90)
The reelected mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barkat, was looking Wednesday at a city council in which his own party controlled only a small portion of the 31 seats around the big wooden table at City Hall.Following Tuesday’s municipal elections, the biggest faction in the capital’s new council is the Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox United Torah Judaism party, which maintained the eight seats it held in the previous five-year term. Another ultra-Orthodox party, the Sephardic Union (Shas), won five seats, one more than it held before.Barkat’s own party, Jerusalem Will Succeed, dropped from six to four seats. The Hitorerut Yerushalayim (Wake Up Jerusalem) faction quadrupled its representation, winning four seats. Meanwhile, the Yerushalmim party, led by council member Rachel Azaria, scooped up two seats, double its previous number.Alongside its failed campaign to unseat incumbent Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat and replace him with its own candidate Moshe Lion, the Likud-Beytenu party only managed to preserve its single seat on the council.Barkat said in his victory address early Wednesday that he intended to leave “no sector” and “no tribe” behind in running the city. Recalling that he had led a near wall-to-wall coalition over the past five years, he urged all parties to work together with him for the development of the capital.Later Wednesday, Barkat said he would “naturally” reach out first to those parties that had backed him for mayor, and then “expand from there” in building his coalition.Lion said he intended to stay in Jerusalem, at least for the time being, Walla news reported overnight. However, the defeated mayoral candidate, who hails from Givatayim, declined to comment on his long-term plans or if he intended to take up that council seat.The remaining seven seats were grabbed by a number of smaller parties, including two seats for the left-leaning Meretz-Labor party, led by veteran city councilman Pepe Alalu, which lost one of its previous three. The new right-wing Yerushalayim Meuhedet (United Jerusalem) party secured two seats, which it may have gained from the national religious faction, currently known as Jewish Home, which fell from three seats to one.The Bnei Torah ultra-Orthodox party and a representative from the Pisgat Ze’ev neighborhood earned one seat apiece.Israelis voted nationwide in local elections on Tuesday with a turnout of only 42.6 percent. Turnout in Jerusalem was 35.9%.

Israelis vote to keep big-party politics out of the local mix

In city after city, the electorate firmly rejected efforts by challengers from national parties to enter the municipal fray

October 23, 2013, 11:28 am 2-The Times of Israel
Even in towns such as Ramat Hasharon and Bat Yam, where incumbents faced serious charges of corruption or other malfeasance, voters preferred incumbency to change.For sitting mayors in Israel’s two major cities, the elections are a vindication. Tel Aviv’s Ron Huldai, now entering his fourth term in City Hall, is considered a successful chief executive of Israel’s iconic modern city. And Tel Aviv’s immense wealth gaps, which formed the bulk of the Horowitz campaign’s challenge to Huldai’s long-standing rule, were not to be laid at the mayor’s doorstep, voters seemed to say.
Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat celebrates with supporters after winning a hard-fought reelection race, Wednesday, October 23, 2013 (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat celebrates with supporters after winning a hard-fought reelection race, Wednesday, October 23, 2013 (photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
In Jerusalem, the satisfaction in Kikar Safra, Jerusalem’s city hall, is even greater. Incumbent Nir Barkat is entering his second term as Jerusalem’s “secular alternative” to Haredi rule of the city, secure in the knowledge that there are also many Haredim who want him to continue running their city. Despite fierce efforts to unseat him on the part of Shas chairman Aryeh Deri and, reportedly, the party’s late spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef (whose “last decree,” we are told, was a call to vote for Barkat’s challenger Moshe Lion), the ultra-Orthodox campaign against him failed even to mobilize the Haredi street. Barkat could not have won with the meager 36 percent turnout if at least some Haredi residents had not decided to either stay home or actively vote for him.Jerusalem is also a city where ethnic extraction matters. Large neighborhoods of Mizrahi, or “eastern,” Jews whose parents and grandparents came to Israel from the Muslim world, are supposed to feel an instinctive opposition to an elitist Ashkenazi, or European, candidate. Barkat is as elitist — a multimillionaire investor — and, culturally, as Ashkenazi as they come. But he’ll be starting a second term in Kikar Safra with the satisfying knowledge that even many Mizrahi Jews are happy, or at least not overly unhappy, with his stewardship of their city.As always, it is important to note that Jerusalem’s Arab residents, comprising as much as one-third of the city’s population, once again refused to vote in the municipal elections in protest over Israel’s control of the city.The losses sustained by the challengers in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem are also indicative of another trend seen widely in these elections: the rejection of “parachute” national candidates. Cities are not stepping-stones in a political career focused elsewhere, voters seemed to say.Thus, perhaps with the exception of Ze’ev Bielski, who returned from a failed Knesset bid to win his former seat as Ra’anana mayor, candidates from national politics were largely rejected by voters: Lion, who moved to Jerusalem just months before the municipal elections; Horowitz, who refused during his campaign to say whether he would leave the Knesset to serve on Tel Aviv’s city council even if he failed to win the top job; Carmel Shama Hacohen, who sought to win Ramat Gan after failing to return to the Knesset in January on the Likud list; former Yisrael Beytenu MK Lia Shemtov in Upper Nazareth; and even MK Hanin Zoabi in Nazareth, one of the most high-profile of Israeli Arab leaders.

Meanwhile, in Beit Shemesh

Beit Shemesh residents arguing over politics in the lead-up to elections (Photo credit: Yaakov Lederman/ Flash 90)
Beit Shemesh residents arguing over politics in the lead-up to elections (Photo credit: Yaakov Lederman/ Flash 90)
It is worth remembering this nationwide rejection of the nationalization of local politics before turning to Beit Shemesh.On Wednesday morning, when it was clear he had lost to incumbent mayor — and Haredi rabbi — Moshe Abutbul, Beit Shemesh mayoral challenger Eli Cohen lamented that the race had taken on religious overtones, telling Army Radio that he, too, was a “traditional” Jew.Of course, his own campaign worked hard to warn Beit Shemesh voters (or at least reporters) of the threat of continued Haredi rule of the city. But faced with the loss, he did not lament the victory of a Haredi Beit Shemesh over a secular one. Rather, his about-face suggested that his own assessment of the results saw Beit Shemesh voters rejecting first and foremost the transformation of their municipal race into an arena for Israel’s national identity battles.

Bad information

No accounting of these elections would be complete without a word about the dismal handling of information, from voting instructions to elections results, by the Interior Ministry. The website offering Israelis instructions on voting rules and ballot stations was not translated into Arabic, Russian, English, French, Amharic or any other language spoken by large numbers of Israelis.The ministry failed to publish the lists of candidates until just a few short days before the elections — and then did so in a bizarre downloadable Excel spreadsheet that ran into thousands of dense entries. The voting results were published hours after figures had already appeared on municipal websites, and in the same unreadable format — even as many municipalities (for example, Jerusalem and Modiin) managed to publish more accessible figures.The ministry also repeatedly lamented the low turnout and repeatedly called on Israelis to go vote, but did not feel election day should be made a national holiday, as is done for elections to the Knesset.Local elections are profoundly important to Israeli public life. Key services, including education, welfare and public health, are handled largely in local government. If voters can be said to have sent any message on Tuesday, it was that they wanted their local governments to remain local and concerned with these administrative functions, rather than becoming embroiled in the divisive ideological and identity politics of the Knesset.With the Interior Ministry’s handling of the elections, it might be fair to complain that the national government seems, in its turn, less than committed to the flourishing of local politics.

ALLTIME