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Prime Minister of Israel

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The Prime Minister of Israel (Hebrew: ראש הממשלה, Rosh HaMemshala, lit. Head of Government<ref name="fn_1">The Hebrew words ראש הממשלה Rosh HaMemshala can refer also to prime ministers of other states besides Israel, for example, the prime minister of Britain can be called in Hebrew ראש ממשלת בריטניה Rosh Memshelet Britanya or ראש הממשלה של בריטניה Rosh HaMemshala Shel Britanya.</ref>) is the elected head of the Israeli government. He or she is usually the leader of the largest political party or coalition of parties in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.

Occasionally, the title of "Premier" is used when referring to the Prime Minister.

Contents

[edit] Order of Succession

Following the "significant" stroke suffered by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in January 2006, a decision was reached by the Israeli Cabinet, under the advice of the Attorney General of Israel to implement the Articles in the Basic Law relevant to the situation. According to the Israeli law, if the Prime Minister becomes incapable of making decisions, power is transferred to the Deputy Prime Minister — at the time, Ehud Olmert — who then becomes Acting Prime Minister until the Prime Minister recovers. According to that same law if the Prime Minister is declared permanently incapacitated then the Acting Prime Minister remains in office for 100 days. Once that period expires the President of Israel oversees the process of assembling a new governing coalition. If the Prime Minister dies, the Cabinet chooses a new Prime Minister[1]. Elections were already due to occur within 100 days of the beginning of his coma thus the post-election coalition building process pre-empted the emergency provisions for the selection of a new Prime Minister. Olmert was declared Prime Minister-designate as a result of the elections, on April 6. Sharon was to be declared "permanently incapacitated" on Tuesday, April 11th , three days ahead of the 100 day schedule in order to avoid a conflict with Passover but with the proviso that the declaration will not take effect should Sharon's condition improve by Friday.[2]

[edit] Officeholders

A total of twelve people have served as Prime Minister of Israel. Four of those people have served on two non-consecutive occasions.

Name Began term Ended term Party
1. David Ben-Gurion 1948 1954 Mapai
2. Moshe Sharett 1954 1955 Mapai
David Ben-Gurion 1955 1963 Mapai
3. Levi Eshkol 1963 19681 Mapai
Levi Eshkol 1968 19692 Labour1
3b. Yigal Allon (as interim PM) 1969 1969 Labour1
4. Golda Meir 1969 1974 Labour
5. Yitzhak Rabin 1974 1977 Labour
6. Menachem Begin 1977 1983 Likud
7. Yitzhak Shamir 1983 1984 Likud
8. Shimon Peres3 1984 1986 Labour
Yitzhak Shamir3 1986 1992 Likud
Yitzhak Rabin 1992 19954 Labour
Shimon Peres 1995 1996 Labour
9. Benjamin Netanyahu 1996 1999 Likud
10. Ehud Barak 1999 2001 Labour
11. Ariel Sharon 2001 20055 Likud
Ariel Sharon 2005 20066 Kadima5
12. Ehud Olmert6 2006 Kadima

1 In 1968 Mapai merged with other parties to form the Labour Alignment (now known as Labour).

2 PM Eshkol died while in office. Yigal Allon briefly served as acting prime minister until he was replaced by Meir.

3 After the election of 1984, the Likud and Labour parties reached a coalition agreement by which the role of prime minister would be rotated mid-term between them. Shimon Peres of Labour served during the first two years as prime minister, and then the role was passed to Yitzhak Shamir. After the 1988 election Likud was able to govern without the Labour party, and Yitzhak Shamir became prime minister again.

4 PM Rabin was assassinated while in office.

5 On 21 November 2005, PM Sharon, along with several other ministers and MKs, split from Likud over the issue of disengagement from the Gaza Strip and negotiations over the final status of the West Bank. Sharon formed a new party, Kadima, that would go on to compete in the following elections of March 2006. Sharon continued as Prime Minister.

6 As the result of Ariel Sharon suffering a severe stroke on January 4 2006, and being put under general anesthetic, Ehud Olmert served as the Acting Prime Minister (Hebrew: ממלא מקום ראש הממשלה) from January 4 [3] to April 14, according to Basic Law: The Government: "Should the Prime Minister be temporarily unable to discharge his duties, his place will be filled by the Acting Prime Minister. After the passage of 100 days upon which the Prime Minister does not resume his duties, the Prime Minister will be deemed permanently unable to exercise his office." In Sharon's case, this occurred on April 14, 2006, upon which Olmert assumed the office in his own right. [4]


[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

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[edit] External links

cs:Premiér Izraele de:Liste der israelischen Ministerpräsidenten es:Primer Ministro de Israel eo:Ĉefministroj de Israelo fr:Premiers ministres d'Israël id:Perdana Menteri Israel it:Elenco di primi ministri israeliani he:ראש ממשלת ישראל lb:Premierministere vun Israel nl:Lijst van premiers van Israël ja:イスラエルの首相 pl:Premierzy Izraela pt:Primeiro-ministro de Israel ru:Список премьер-министров Израиля sk:Zoznam predsedov vlád Izraela sr:Премијер Израела sv:Lista över Israels premiärministrar zh:以色列总理

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