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POLITICAL PARTIES:
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Dec. 25, 2002
The Shinui Party platform: Shinui is a democratic, secular, Liberal, Zionist, peace-seeking party
Religious-secular ties:
Shinui fights against religious coercion and for a secular state with room
for all opinions and beliefs. Extortion and exploitation of the public
treasury for religious purposes have to end.
The ultra-Orthodox establishment is a threat to the orderly administration
of a free society and to the individual freedom that characterizes a
democratic state. Attempts to turn Israel into a state based on Halacha
(Jewish religious law) endanger our future. We seek to separate state and
religion, while preserving the country's Zionist character.
Foreign policy:
Shinui supports the peace process. However, Arafat is not a partner for
peace, and negotiations have to be conducted with moderate Palestinians. The
cessation of terror is an indispensable condition for progress in the
diplomatic negotiations. Illegal outposts must be evacuated immediately.
As part of the peace arrangements, Israel will also have to leave
settlements scattered in the heart of Palestinian populations, but Israel
will not evacuate settlement blocs, and these will be integrated within
Israel's borders. There are also large settlements, which will be subject to
negotiation. We are committed to setting up a separation fence as a partial
defense against the frequency of terrorist infiltrations.
At the end of the peace process, we will have to find a modus vivendi for
Jerusalem, to enable both sides to coexist in peace, with respect for the
holy sites of all the three religions. A Palestinian state will be
established only after the Palestinians renounce their right to return.
Economics:
We represent the middle classes, that are the backbone of Israeli society.
In our opinion, the middle class pays too much in taxes and receives too
little in return. A reduction in taxes will free up investment funds that
will start the wheels of the economy turning once again, thereby providing
jobs for the unemployed. We see ourselves as representing professionals, the
self-employed, business proprietors, managers and administrative staff,
high-tech staffers, those in the standing army, farmers, professors and
teachers, pensioners and students.
We are the voice of the productive, creative, cultured layer of Israeli
society, those who pay taxes and serve in the military reserves, who
believe in law and order, who despise corruption, who suffer from
bureaucracy, and who unashamedly believe in Zionism.
The rate of privatization has to be accelerated and the state must
relinquish its heavy involvement in the business sector. Within the
globalization process, Israel has to be part of the Western economy and we
unreservedly support a free market economy, scientific and technological
development and high-tech industries. The role of trade unions is to take
care of workers' welfare, but the Histadrut has become a political
organization serving party-political interests and does not operate for the
benefit of the economy. The state's job in economic development is to invest
in infrastructure.
Military service:
Shinui believes that the Tal Law, which grants legitimization to draft
dodgers, is a national tragedy. The Tal Law rewards a prize for evasion of
service. It inflicts severe damage on the principle of equality and
endangers our security. Every Jewish youngster who is healthy in mind and in
body must serve in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for the same period of
time and under the same conditions.
This obligation is binding also for yeshiva students, except when the IDF
decides, from professional considerations, not to recruit him. In such a
case, he is entitled to go out to earn a living in the workplace, and not
have to remain trapped in a yeshiva. The Ministry of Defense has to pay
proper compensation for reserve army service, especially to those who serve
prolonged periods in combat units.
Education:
The state has to strive to provide free education from kindergarten to
university. Education must impart humanistic, democratic, Liberal and
pluralistic values. A core curriculum, giving the foundation for the
knowledge and education to eventually integrate autonomous individuals in an
information-rich society and educate them to personal, social, national and
Zionist commitment, must be taught in all schools, of all streams.
Shinui will act to enhance the standing of teachers and school principals
and to improve their training. Shinui advocates equal opportunities in
education, in order to reduce gaps and to give every schoolchild the chance
to fulfill his/her potential. Better staff and larger budgets must be
directed to the outlying districts and for the weaker strata of society. The
Ministry of Education will not subsidize educational institutions that do
not teach Zionism, civics, mathematics, science and English. Shinui views
higher education as the basis for the nation's scientific and technological
advancement.
Health:
Everyone is entitled to the health benefits made possible by medical
science. The health system at present does not meet this criterion. The
state has to make every financial, organizational and scientific effort to
ensure preventative health services for every healthy person and skilled
medical treatment for every sick person. At the same time, private medical
services should be encouraged to develop, since they ease the heavy burden
that is overloading the public health services.
The legal system:
Shinui sees the law courts in Israel as the backbone of Israeli democracy.
While not exempt from criticism, the courts have to be defended because of
the anti-democratic forces conspiring against them. Every effort must be
made to strengthen the rule of law. The Ministry of Justice has to allocate
the requisite resources to shorten legal processes. The excessive authority
of the rabbinical courts must be curtailed and their powers transferred to
civil courts.
Shinui supports the passing of more Basic Laws, in order to consolidate a
constitution for the country. The very first priority is to pass a Basic Law
on Legislation, so that the legal framework is laid down for Basic Law
legislation. Then, a Law on Freedom of Religion must be passed, in order to
establish equality between the different streams of Judaism and to liberate
citizens from the arbitrary rulings of the religious establishment.
Shinui battles capricious bureaucracy and waste. Public administration must
be made more efficient and officials must interfere less in citizens' lives.
Shinui champions integrity in public life and combats corruption at every
level of government. Clean administration and the rule of law are essential
conditions for correctly regulated public life.
Shinui demands a new division of the nation's resources. The billions
earmarked for religious purposes have to be used for more essential
requirements: Less to religious needs and more for social needs. Less to
religious needs and more for health. Less to religious needs and more to
education and science. Less to religious needs and more for culture and the
arts.
The Jewish World:
Close contact with the Jewish world is of prime importance to Shinui. The
centrality of Israel in Jewish consciousness must be enhanced through
educational activity among secular and religious Jewish youngsters
worldwide. The damage inflicted by the religious establishment in Israel on
the Reform and Conservative streams hinders the majority of Diaspora Jewry
in their affiliation with Israel, leading to rifts within the Jewish people.
Immigration:
The Law of Return is the foundation stone of Israel as a Jewish and Zionist
state. The state must invest every effort to increase immigration and to
create the conditions for immigrants to be quickly absorbed in the nation's
social, economic and cultural life. The ultra-Orthodox persecution of
'mixed' immigrant families from the former Soviet Union must be stopped.
Women's rights:
Every woman is entitled to realize her full potential and to equal
opportunities in any job and situation, including equal pay for equal work.
Equality of rights should also apply to ultra-Orthodox women, who are at
present greatly discriminated-against. Any law or procedure that hinders
women's equality, on the grounds of Jewish religious law, will be abolished.
In addition, great efforts must be made to reduce domestic violence, the
sexual exploitation of women and girls, and sexual harassment.
Higher education:
Shinui considers university students to be Israel's future as a progressive
and developed Western state. The enormous sums that flow to yeshivas and to
yeshiva students must be diverted to the universities and their students, in
order to upgrade academic levels and to lower fees, until fees can be
totally abolished. Colleges are an expression of the fact that the field of
higher education also needs private enterprise. The subsidies for college
fees must be made the same as for university fees.
Pensioners:
People who have worked all their lives, supporting their family, deserve a
dignified old age. Israeli society sins unforgivably when it condemns
pensioners, who depend on the National Insurance allowance, to lives of
humiliation and distress.
Equality For gays:
Shinui upholds the struggle of the homosexual-lesbian community against all
discrimination based on sexual orientation and for equal rights of
single-sex couples, including the right to adopt children.
The environment:
Shinui champions efforts on behalf of the environment, to protect flora and
fauna, to prevent cruelty to animals, to preserve archeological sites and to
create a more beautiful Israel. Shinui initiated the Law of the Commissioner
for Future Generations, to prevent irreparable environmental damage.
Road accidents:
The carnage on the roads is, Shinui believes, a national disaster. The
government must make the fight against road accidents a top priority and it
must designate massive budgets to the upgrading of road and rail
infrastructure. Greater emphasis must be placed on educating youngsters to
caution on the roads, while also imposing more severe penalties on culpable
drivers.
Civil rights:
Shinui believes that every citizen is entitled to decide what to believe,
what to eat, what and where to buy, when and where to travel, where to go
for entertainment, whom and how to marry, and how to be buried. Freedom of
expression and freedom of association are the cornerstones of democratic
life.
Shinui upholds the basic values of Israel as a Zionist and Jewish state,
open to every Jew, a state ruled by law in which the minorities have equal
rights, in the spirit of the Declaration of Independence.
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