Browsing articles from "February, 2009"
Feb 8, 2009
Barak

Making votes count

My good friend Joel Rubin has just returned from a security conference in Israel and senses despair among large parts of the population:

My Tel Aviv cousins…pay more than half their income to national taxes, with a significant portion dedicated to supporting these settlers. They are infuriated by the reality that they are subsidizing the lifestyle of a group of people that has no interest in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through a two-state solution, relegating Israelis to unending conflict.

Worse, while the people of Tel Aviv know that the settlers are holding the country’s politics hostage, they have no idea how to change this.

Joel ought to read a great book by Gary Cox, Making Votes Count. Why? Because the majority of Israeli Jews support a two-state solution. As in the US, the reason the right in Israel, especially the settlers on the West Bank, are able to dominate Israeli politics is because, unlike the left, they are vocal and organized. Joel’s cousins in Tel Aviv will never be able to get the policies they want until they organize for them. The take away point from making votes count is that organization is often more important for winning elections than public support. This may be self-evident, but moaning about politics to friends and family doesn’t change a thing.

The MA in Democracy and Governance at Georgetown University is now accepting applications for the 2012-2013 academic year. Find out more.
Founded in 2004, Democracy and Society is a biannual print journal published by the Center for Democracy and Civil Society at Georgetown University. The D&S Blog provides web-only content, including special reports and investigative series, on issues relating to democracy and development.

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