JERUSALEM (AP) — Shiver me timbers! Israel's newest political party has more than a platform — it's got a plank.
The Israel Pirate Party is one of 34 lists competing in the country's Jan. 22 parliamentary election.
While only a dozen or so have a realistic chance of getting elected,
many Israelis fed up with existential issues like the conflict with the
Palestinians and possible war with Iran are seeking sanctuary with some
of the quirkier parties.
It's a regular ritual in Israeli
politics. In addition to the usual battles between parties representing
doves and hawks on the one hand and secular and Orthodox Jews on the
other, each election season typically offers an array of obscure and
offbeat lists.
Previous offerings have included a
faction calling for the establishment of a national casino and a group
led by a fishmonger and puppeteer that tried to abolish bank fees. Green
Leaf has made several runs for parliament looking to legalize
marijuana, and in the 2009 election an offshoot of that party aligned
with elderly Holocaust survivors in one of the oddest mergers in
Israel's mottled political history. It too fell far short of making the
house.
This time around, a castaway from the marijuana-Holocaust party has
drifted even further off shore, offering a "pirate" platform that
promotes a variety of personal freedoms, including the right to
plagiarize and sail the high seas.The main chance for niche parties to make a splash is just before the election, during a two-week TV ads campaign. Since all registered parties receive government advertising subsidies, even the most marginal movements can get air time. All the party commercials are concentrated in a single nightly segment on TV.
The pirates, though, got off to a
head start. The party's 33-year-old, ponytailed leader, Ohad Shem-Tov,
showed up at parliament to register the party earlier this month wearing
a scarf on his head and a hook on his hand. This is the same mate who
won notoriety in Israel for heading to Gaza on the eve of Israel's 2005
withdrawal and recommending that settlers prepare for their impending
forced evacuation by rolling up a joint and relaxing.
Accompanying him, skull in hand,
was one of his hearties, who identifies himself — with proper pirate
inflection — as Noam Kuzarrr. He sported long black hair and an
impressive "blackbeard."
No. 5 on the party list, Rafram Haddad, spent five months in Libyan
captivity facing espionage changes before he was released in 2010 in a
secret deal that intermediaries brokered between Israel and
since-deposed Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi."We are not in favor of hijacking ships," clarified Dan Biron, a former TV director who owns a Jerusalem bar and is placed third on the party's list. "You can say what we are offering is on the verge of utopia."
The Israel Pirate Party is part
of a global pirate political movement established in Sweden in 2006,
operates in 45 other countries and has sent members to legislatures in
countries including Germany, Finland and Tunisia.
Influenced by Hollywood
blockbusters like "Pirates of the Caribbean," the West largely has a
romanticized vision of piracy. Aficionados have even established a mock
holiday, designating Sept. 19 as "Talk Like a Pirate Day."
Elsewhere in the world, piracy is
no laughing matter. In Somalia, modern-day pirates have hijacked
merchant ships in recent years, holding hundreds hostage at a time and
demanding hefty sums as ransoms. Some hostages have been killed.
Israel's pirates face long odds in the January vote.
Israel's election system is
proportional. The 120 seats in the parliament are divided among the
parties according to how many votes each receives nationwide. Parties
need to draw at least 2 percent of the general election vote to win
representation, equaling roughly 70,000 votes. The pirates' crew appears
to be a bit bare-bone: Shem-Tov said the party currently has only about
200 mates.
They are not the only long shots
in the race. Other parties this time include a fringe anti-Zionist rabbi
who's trying to bring secular Jews back to religion, a joint party of
Ethiopian and Indian Jewish immigrants and a charismatic Hassidic
movement famous in Israel for blasting religious rock music out of vans
and starting impromptu dance parties on the streets.
Most pollsters give these parties no chance of getting enough votes to enter parliament, so off to Davy Jones' Locker they go.
However, Israel does have a
history of protest parties pulling off election upsets. In 2006, a group
of retirees led by an octogenarian former spymaster captured seven
seats and joined Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Cabinet. Seen largely as a
recipient of protest votes against the system, it disappeared in the
next election in 2009.
Green Leaf narrowly missed out in the 2003 and 2006 elections before flopping badly in 2009.
Shem-Tov says he still represents
pot smokers, but he insists the pirate party has loftier goals:
reforming democracy. The Internet-based party rejects what it calls
antiquated copyright legislation, promoting the free sharing of
information.
The pirate party grants equal
power to its three central bodies: the dozen captains on "the command
bridge," the 120 sailors on "the deck" and the entire pirate nation
aboard "the ship." Elected representatives answer to online referendums,
a concept these marauders like to call "liquid feedback."
"Dressing up is a gimmick, it's a
way to draw attention," Shem-Tov admits. "But this party is serious,
even if we use a little humor and do it with a smile."
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