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In Israel, an inspiring political model that … failed

The coalition that has governed Israel is preparing to clear out its desks and hand over power. Theirs is the story of a political failure – but an audacious, inspiring one that is very much worth telling.

It’s about an alliance of sworn political enemies who worked together. They presented an alternative to the zero-sum partisan combat that complicates progress in democracies worldwide, America’s included.

Why We Wrote This

It crops up in democracies globally: Majorities agree on policy, but partisan battling stymies action. The outgoing government of Israel models what can happen when opponents prioritize vision, generosity, and courage.

Indeed, they passed the first government budget in three years, increased employment, oversaw a strong pandemic response, and slashed the government deficit. But gladiatorial partisanship struck back, decrying compromise as treachery.

Still, it’s a lesson about what can happen when cooperation is a priority.

Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett called it the 70/70 rule – one that is present in many democracies. It involved setting aside the hot-button issues – which ultimately have to be addressed – in favor of the other 70% of issues on which 70% of Israelis agree: infrastructure, schools, crime, inflation.

“When you neutralize the most politically sensitive issues,” Mr. Bennett wrote in an opinion piece, “ministers from left and right saw each other as decent people working for the good of Israel and not as the demons we’d been calling each other.”

This is the story of an audacious, inspiring political failure.

And even as its authors – the departing coalition government in Israel – prepare to clear out their desks and hand over power, it is very much worth telling.

That’s because, over the last 18 months, an alliance of sworn political enemies has managed to come together and work together. They’ve chosen cooperation over political combat. They resolved that scoring political points mattered less than getting things done.

Why We Wrote This

It crops up in democracies globally: Majorities agree on policy, but partisan battling stymies action. The outgoing government of Israel models what can happen when opponents prioritize vision, generosity, and courage.

They’ve shown there’s an alternative to the zero-sum partisan combat increasingly blocking the day-to-day business of government not just in Israel, but in other democracies worldwide, America’s included.

And they’re leaving less than halfway into their four-year term not because they’ve failed to deliver. They made good on their pledge to make democratic government function again, passing the first annual government budget in three years. They increased employment, oversaw one of the world’s most successful pandemic responses, and slashed a widening government deficit.

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