The Jerusalem Post ePaper

Coalition member: General strike was planned with PMO

• By ELIAV BREUER Zachy Hennessey contributed to this report.

The general strike on Monday that was called by the Histadrut Labor Federation, was coordinated with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s inner circle, a senior member of the coalition confirmed on Thursday.

The story was first reported by Kan on Tuesday evening. According to the report, one of Netanyahu’s spokespersons, Yonatan Urich, contacted senior Histadrut officials on Monday morning urging them to launch a strike in order to give the prime minister a decisive reason to announce that he was postponing the legislation, against the wishes of Justice Minister Yariv Levin.

Similar contacts were made by Sara Netanyahu, Kan reported on Wednesday. The senior coalition member confirmed this.

The Histadrut, officially called the General Organization of Workers in Israel, is Israel’s national trade union center, and represents the majority of Israel’s trade unionists. A Histadrut strike is therefore a doomsday weapon, members spanning many sectors of Israel’s public service. The Histadrut leaders’ press conference announcing the strike was set for 9:45 a.m. on Monday, and Netanyahu’s announcement that he was freezing the legislation was initially scheduled for 10:00, meaning that the strike was only intended to last for 15 minutes.

However, the plan went awry when National Security Minister MK Itamar Ben-Gvir threatened that if Netanyahu announced a freeze, he would quit the government. This was unexpected, and took the entire day to work out. Ben-Gvir eventually agreed to receive a National Guard under his control in exchange for not quitting the government. The strike thus ended up dragging on for hours. It included the Israel Airport Authority, local authorities, preschools, the Israel Medical Association and most of Israel’s universities. Hundreds of other public and private companies joined the strike throughout the day.

The strike also included a halt to all departing flights from Ben-Gurion Airport for approximately two hours. This was illegal, Israel Airport Authority’s Histadrut leader and Likud stalwart Pinchas Idan admitted in a phone conversation with Kan’s Michael Shemesh on Thursday. But Idan agreed to do so on the premise that the delay would only be for an hour. He acted on Histadrut chief Arnon Bar-David’s orders, he said during the conversation.

The Likud at first denied the report that the Prime Minister’s Office had coordinated the strike with the Histadrut, saying on Tuesday that it was “fake news on steroids.”

However, on Thursday it said: “Not only were Prime Minister Netanyahu and his wife Sara uninvolved in the Histadrut strike, they opposed it forcefully and made this clear to the Histadrut chair and his wife in telephone conversations they held after the strike broke out. They said the strike was a severe mistake that harmed Israelis and must stop immediately.

Bar-David also denied the report.

“For over three decades I have dedicated my life to public service, and what always guides me in my decisions is the good of the country,” he told Kan. “The decision I made to shut down the economy was one of the hardest I ever made – even out of the recognition of the responsibility on my shoulders. The fable that the strike was planned or coordinated with the prime minister’s office is baseless,” he said.

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2023-03-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://jpost.pressreader.com/article/281530820283827

Jerusalem Post