Alongside anti-democratic legislation, we can also expect an array of discriminatory policies to be enacted.
The new government will likely implement some variation of the Prawer plan, which intends to forcefully relocate thousands of Palestinian Bedouins and take over their land. It will continue pouring billions of dollars on Israel's settlement in the West Bank and Golan Heights and expropriate more houses and land in East Jerusalem.
And it will probably imprison thousands of refugees and "illegal" migrant laborers from Africa currently workers in Israeli cities.
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There is, however, one clear advantage to the election results: clarity. At least now there will be no liberal Zionist façade, camouflaging Israel's unwillingness to dismantle its colonial project. The Israeli refrain that a diplomatic solution with the Palestinians cannot be achieved because the Palestinians lack leadership will ring even more hollow.
Finally, the claim that Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East will exposed for what it is: a half truth. While Israel is a democracy for Jews it is a repressive regime for Palestinians.
We can also expect little resistance to the right-wing government, since Herzog's Zionist Camp and Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid are also Arabphobes and therefore less against the substance of such a government and more against Netanyahu's blatant right wing style.
After all it was a political pac associated with Herzog's party that in the days leading to the elections paid for large billboards with a picture of (Bibi) Netanyahu and his extreme right contender Naftali Bennett warning the viewers that "With Bibibennet we will remain stuck with the Palestinians for eternity." The pac must have overlooked the fact that 20 percent of Israeli citizens are Palestinians.
And yet, during these elections there was one ray of light that shimmered through the darkness. The attempt by most of the Jewish parties to sideline the Palestinian citizens produced an unintended result. Creating a united front, the Palestinians garnered 14 seats, almost 25 percent more than they received in the previous elections, and they are now the third biggest faction in the Knesset.
Unlike many of his counterparts, Ayman Odeh, the head of the new Joint Arab List, is a true leader. Extremely incisive, he often uses irony and wit to undermine his detractors while advancing an egalitarian vision for the future. In a moment of candor, a well-known Israeli commentator characterized his demeanor as a serious threat: "He's really dangerous," she said, "he projects something every Israeli can relate to."
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Will this threat be able to stop the imminent entrenchment of a tide of new Apartheid laws? I sincerely doubt it.
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