Skip to main content

Israeli politicians wary of being shocked by electricity union

Even with the mass power breaks following the flash floods this week, Israeli politicians didn't dare confront the mighty electricity labor union.
Lightning strikes over a power station during a storm in the city of Ashkelon October 28, 2015. REUTERS/ Amir Cohen       TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY      - RTX1TPK2
Read in 

Former Finance Minister Yair Lapid has an impressive ability to identify the public mood in Israel at any given moment. Sometimes these are actual trends that Lapid connects to just in the right way, and he redefines them as he is campaigning. That is exactly what he did in the 2013 elections. He walked away with 19 seats and became leader of the middle class after the 2011 summer social protests. He did the same thing in the last election (March 2015), successfully pulling himself out of a political nadir by focusing his campaign on public corruption. His current strategic efforts, intended to get him elected prime minister, show the same kind of understanding of the Israeli public. He is breaking right, attacking the left and getting close to the ultra-Orthodox.

That is why a Facebook post that he wrote Oct. 27 is nothing less than a barometer of the public’s attitude toward the Israel Electric Company (IEC) and the greatest fiasco in that company’s history, which occurred this week. Lapid was the first to notice that the Israeli public was resentful of the IEC's management, its workers’ union or both, and that there was enormous political potential in this animosity. The 230,000 angry Israelis who lost power from anywhere from one to three days following flash floods are looking for guidance and an action plan to resolve the situation.

Access the Middle East news and analysis you can trust

Join our community of Middle East readers to experience all of Al-Monitor, including 24/7 news, analyses, memos, reports and newsletters.

Subscribe

Only $100 per year.