It’s 10 p.m. in Israel — and the polls are now closed.
Real-time election results by city and sector (Kibbutzim, Bedouin, etc.) can be tracked here.
In advance of Tuesday’s election in Israel, candidates of various persuasions have shown no shame in cribbing from the storied presidential campaign of Barack Obama — regardless of their ideological similarities or differences with the American president, The Daily Beast reports.
The Shas Party, whose constituency traditionally has been composed of Orthodox Sephardic Jews, has gone so far as to reappropriate for its own purposes Obama’s “Yes We Can” slogan. Meanwhile, the leader of the centrist Kadima Party, Tzipi Livni, is evoking Obama’s message with the catchphrase, “You have a chance to make history,” and Benjamin Netanyahu, of the center-right Likud Party, last year hired on two Obama strategists.
Echoing a recent Forward story, Ashley Rindsberg, in The Daily Beast, writes:
“Far more than just a source of borrowed slogans and talking points, Obama has become a political weapon. The Kadima and the left-of-center Labor parties have campaigned on the notion that ‘Bibi’ Netanyahu simply won’t be able to get along with Obama. In the Israeli media, the portmanteau ‘Obibi’ is used to describe Netanyahu’s rise to front-runner against the backdrop of a liberal American president who might be less than sympathetic to his positions.
But it’s not completely clear that even the centrist or left contenders would simply line up for Obama once in the government. Livni has tried the hardest to identify with Obama, going so far as to print campaign leaflets for Hebrew-speaking voters that read, in English, ‘Believni.’ Although Kadima led the unilateral withdrawal from Gaza under Ariel Sharon, there’s little indication that Kadima under Livni would follow the same path in the West Bank, no matter how much President Obama might desire such an outcome.”
For those of you who thought that voting was the time for you to inflict your political choice on 300million other folk, think again. Rabbi David Seidenberg has honed a prayer to help us move “beyond partisan acrimony” and to vote in a true spirit for the good of the common weal.
His prayer, written in 1996 but re-written in 2006 and significantly updated again for these elections helps make Jewish sense of our civic obligation to vote, remind us that voting should take place for the good of the whole society and elevate our mental state for the act of voting.
For those who feel as though they have discharged their duty for 4 more years once they’ve filled in the ballot, the prayer also includes a section that explicitly links our thoughts and votes to our actions: fixing the world may start at the ballot box, but it doesn’t end there.
For the online prayer checkout his Web site.
If you just want to download the prayer in English and Hebrew to print out to use outside the booth, you can get a PDF version here.