Israeli legislative election, 1949

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The Elections for the Constituent Assembly were held in newly-independent Israel on 25 January, 1949. Voter turnout was 85.8%. Two days after its first meeting on 14 February, 1949, legislators voted to change the name of the body to the Knesset (Hebrew: כנסת, translated as Assembly). It is known today as the First Knesset.

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[edit] Results

Party Votes % Seats at start of session Seats at end of session
Mapai 155,274 35.7% 46 46
Mapam ¹ 64,018 14.7% 19 20
United Religious Front 52,982 12.2% 16 16
Herut ² 49,782 11.5% 14 12
General Zionists 22,661 5.2% 7 7
Progressive Party 17,786 4.1% 5 5
Sephardim and Oriental Communities 15,287 3.5% 4 4
Maki ¹ 15,148 3.5% 4 3
Democratic List of Nazareth 7,387 1.7% 2 2
Fighters' List 5,363 1.2% 1 1
WIZO 5,173 1.2% 1 1
Yemenite Association 4,399 1.0% 1 1
Non-qualifiers 19,424 4.5% - -
Total valid votes 434,684 100%
Hebrew Communists ¹ - - 0 0
Ari Jabotinsky ² - - 0 1
Hillel Kook ² - - 0 1

¹ Eliezer Preminger left Maki and created the Hebrew Communists before deciding to join Mapam

² Ari Jabotinsky and Hillel Kook broke away from Herut, but were not recognised as a separate party by the speaker.

[edit] Non-qualifiers

The following parties ran for election, but did not pass the electoral threshold of 1% (4,346 votes):

  • Brit HaTzohar
  • For Jerusalem
  • The Popular Arab Block
  • The United List of Religious Workers
  • The Working and Religious Women
  • The Workers Block
  • Traditional Judaism List
  • Yitzhak Greenbaum List
  • Ultra-orthodox List

[edit] The First Knesset

The first government was formed by David Ben Gurion, on 8 March, 1949. His Mapai party formed a coalition with the United Religious Front, the Progressive Party, the Sephardim and Oriental Communities and the Democratric List of Nazareth, and there were 13 ministers, including Yitzhak Greenbaum, whose party had not made it into the Knesset. Joseph Sprintzak of Mapai was appointed as the speaker.

The trend of political instability in Israel was started when Ben Gurion resigned on 15 October, 1950 over disagreements with the United Religious Front on education in the new immigrant camps and the religious education system, as well as demands that the Supply and Rationing Ministry be closed and a businessman appointed as Minister for Trade and Industry.

Ben Gurion formed a second government on 1 November, 1950 with the same coalition partners and ministers as previously.

The door was opened for the elections for the second knesset when the government resigned on 14 February, 1951 after the Knesset had rejected the Minister of Education and Culture's proposals on the registration of schoolchildren.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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