Israel's elections reflect the strong democratic tradition of the State of
Israel. Election campaigns are a lively affair, accompanied by vigorous debate
of the issues. Israelis take great interest in political affairs, including
internal policy and foreign relations, and actively participate in the electoral
process.
Israel is a parliamentary
system. The Prime Minister, who heads Israel's government, is chosen after
the elections from a member of the newly-elected Knesset, Israel's parliament.
National elections to the Knesset are held once every four years, unless
circumstances call for early elections.
The framework of the Israeli electoral system is defined in Article 4 of the
Basic
Law: The Knesset, which states: "The Knesset shall be elected by general,
national, direct, equal, secret and proportional elections, in accordance with
the Knesset Elections Law."
• General: Every Israeli citizen aged 18 or older on election day
has the right to vote. Israelis of all ethnic groups and religious beliefs,
including Arab-Israelis, actively participate in the process.
• National: The entire country constitutes a single electoral
constituency.
• Direct: The Knesset, the Israeli parliament, is elected directly
by the voters, not through a body of electors. On election day, voters cast one
ballot for a political party to represent them in the Knesset.
• Equal: All votes cast are equal in weight.
• Secret: Elections are by secret ballot.
• Proportional: The 120 Knesset seats are assigned in proportion to
each party's percentage of the total national vote. However, the minimum
required for a party to win a Knesset seat is 2% of the total votes cast.
• Number of eligible voters in the 2013
Knesset elections: 5,656,705
• Number of polling stations in Israel: 10,128,
including 190 in hospitals and 57 in prisons
• Number of polling stations at
diplomatic missions abroad: 96
Who can be elected?
Every citizen aged 21 or older is eligible for election to the Knesset,
unless a court has deprived him of that right by virtue of the law or he has
been sentenced, by a final verdict, to actual imprisonment for a term of over
three months. In addition, unless the chairman of the Central Elections
Committee has determined that the crime of which he has been convicted does not
bear moral turpitude, seven years must have passed from the day he concluded
serving his term of imprisonment to the day of submission of the list of
candidates.
Senior public officials - including the President, state comptroller, judges,
as well as the chief-of-staff and high-ranking military officers - may not stand
for election to the Knesset unless they have resigned their position at least
100 days before the elections. In addition, the Central Elections Committee may
by law prevent a candidates' list from participating in elections if its
objectives or actions, expressly or by implication, include one of the
following:
- negation of the existence of the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish
people;
- negation of the democratic character of the State;
- incitement to racism.
Electing parties, not individuals
Knesset elections are based on a vote for a party rather than for individuals
and the many political parties which compete for election to the Knesset reflect
a wide range of outlooks and beliefs.
The number and order of members entering the new Knesset for each party
corresponds to its list of candidates as presented for election. For example, if
a party receives 10 mandates, the first ten candidates on its list enter the new
Knesset.
The direct election of the prime minister, instituted in Israel in 1996, was
abolished under the revised Basic Law: The Government (2001) and the the task of
forming a government and heading it as prime minister is once again assigned by
the President to the Knesset member considered to have the best chance of
forming a viable coalition government in light of the Knesset election
results.
Only parties which have been legally registered with the Party Register, or
an alignment of two or more registered parties, can present a list of candidates
and participate in the elections. Prior to the elections, each party presents
its platform, and the list of candidates for the Knesset, in order of
precedence. The parties select their candidates for the Knesset in primaries or
by other procedures. There are 34 party lists competing for seats in the 19th Knesset.