106: After October 7, can Israeli politics be rebuilt?
54 min
•Apr 15, 20264 days agoSummary
Dr. Inat Wilf, a former Israeli parliament member and political analyst, discusses her new political party (OZ) launched after October 7th and her vision for transforming Israeli politics beyond tribal divisions. The conversation covers the Haredi draft issue, national service reform, and how war-induced social shifts may reshape Israeli electoral dynamics in upcoming elections.
Insights
- October 7th created a watershed moment where Israeli voters recognize fundamental change is necessary, but this sentiment hasn't yet found political expression in existing parties, creating an opening for new political movements
- The traditional Israeli political bloc system (left vs. right, pro/anti-Netanyahu) is breaking down among younger voters and war veterans who reject identity politics and demand substantive vision rather than tribal affiliation
- Haredi welfare dependency and exemption from military service is unsustainable post-October 7th because the social contract was visibly broken when ultra-Orthodox communities refused to mobilize during an existential crisis
- Universal military/national service under unified state framework (not sectoral alternatives) is necessary to rebuild national solidarity and remove identity-based privileges that erode welfare state legitimacy
- Undecided voters in Israeli polls represent a significant hidden demographic (10-30%) whose behavior is unpredictable and could swing elections, similar to how protest votes have historically disrupted Israeli politics
Trends
Post-war political realignment: Major conflicts accelerate social transformation and create 2-3 election cycles before new political orders fully crystallizeRejection of identity politics among younger demographics: War experience is driving voters away from sectarian/tribal voting patterns toward policy-based and vision-based political choicesWelfare state legitimacy crisis: Visible inequities in military service obligations and state benefits are eroding public trust in the social contract and creating demand for universal service requirementsStartup political parties targeting undecided voters: New entrants are focusing on the 20-30% of voters who haven't committed to existing parties rather than competing for established bloc votersNational service as nation-building tool: Shift from military-only conscription to unified civilian-military service framework as mechanism for social cohesion and shared citizenshipGenerational political divide: War veterans and younger voters show fundamentally different political priorities than older generations, prioritizing substantive governance over leadership personalitiesDecoupling of religious observance from political affiliation: Traditional correlation between religiosity and voting patterns is weakening among post-October 7th cohortsDistrust of existing leadership across spectrum: Voters across left-right divide view current political class as mediocre and incapable of addressing fundamental challengesUndecided voter mobilization: Campaigns are shifting from traditional media to grassroots engagement (home meetings, podcasts) to reach voters outside traditional polling modelsSymbolic state unity through universal service: Emphasis on shared uniform and equal service length as mechanism to rebuild fractured national identity and reduce sectoral divisions
Topics
Haredi military draft and national service reformIsraeli electoral system and bloc politics breakdownPost-October 7th political realignment and generational shiftsWelfare state sustainability and service-based entitlementsIdentity politics vs. policy-based votingUndecided voter behavior and polling methodologyNational service as nation-building mechanismWar's impact on political transformation timelinesReligious exemptions from military serviceArab-Israeli political participation and citizenshipWomen's military service equityPolitical party startup strategy and grassroots campaignsIsraeli social contract and national solidaritySectoral privilege systems in welfare distributionYouth and veteran voter mobilization
People
Dr. Inat Wilf
Guest discussing her new political party and vision for Israeli political transformation post-October 7th
Haviv Rettig Gur
Podcast host conducting in-depth political analysis interview
Yosef Hadad
Referenced as considering establishing a Zionist Arab political party and volunteering for military service
Benjamin Netanyahu
Discussed as current political leader and subject of electoral analysis
Yair Lapid
Analyzed as part of existing political establishment lacking transformative vision
Naftali Bennett
Discussed as potential recipient of wandering Lapid voters in upcoming elections
Avigdor Lieberman
Mentioned as part of existing political establishment being critiqued
Bezalel Smotrich
Referenced regarding positions on military service and women's conscription
Jack Rose
Honored in episode sponsorship dedication for Holocaust survival and educational legacy
Paul Lawrence Rose
Honored in episode sponsorship dedication for scholarship on antisemitism
Quotes
"If you ask Jews, for example, what are you doing? What's your profession? They will say things like, I used to do this, this, this and that, and then October 7th. And it's almost a universal Jewish phenomena."
Dr. Inat Wilf•Early in episode
"I'm asking of us the hardest possible thing because I'm asking us to go through a transformation that for a very long time we were running away from."
Dr. Inat Wilf•Mid-episode
"Once you see that, you don't unsee it. Yes, there are a lot of people trying to make people to forget it and unsee it. But again, wars accelerate processes, expose divisions, that is something that you can no longer unsee."
Dr. Inat Wilf•Discussing Haredi response to October 7th
"Everyone gets drafted. The military can certainly be considered and some people invest on risk portfolio and personal needs. They are sent to be teachers, but it's not based on your specific sector and identity."
Dr. Inat Wilf•On universal service proposal
"In elections, you only need 20 percent of the voters to substantially change how they think about the issues about what they care about and their priorities for things to shift completely."
Dr. Inat Wilf•On electoral dynamics
Full Transcript
Hi everybody, thanks for joining me. Welcome to a new episode of Ask Javib Anything. Our topic today is the upcoming Israeli elections. I know, there's a lot on our plate, but Israel will have momentous elections. If everything stays the same, that will be momentous. If everything changes, that will be very dramatic as well. The elections have to be held by law by October. And so we're going to do a few episodes, probably very, a great many episodes on this subject. There's so many fundamental issues about Israel's future, about Israel's society that are right now on the agenda of this election that we're going to have a lot of conversations about it. We wanted to start today with a friend of mine, Dr. Inat Wilf, a leading thinker on Israel, on Zionism, on foreign policy, on education policy. Dr. Wilf is the author of several books that explore key issues in Israeli society, and not just the famous ones. How Israeli society organizes its education system, Kharedi education, and Arab education, and secular education, and religious education. These are fundamental questions about our future, about the next generation, about the character of our society. Inat was a member of the Israeli parliament. She served as chair of the education committee, the foreign affairs and defense committee, and she is now running in this election at the head of a brand new party, a brand new party called the OZ party. Now I'm going to get emails, why didn't you interview from my party? Why didn't you interview this person or that person? Folks, it's the beginning of a large conversation. And Inat is an extraordinary analyst, as well as someone who is now asking Israelis for their vote. So this is a beginning, and also I'm really curious. I really want to ask her what this election is about, how it's going to play out, all of those things. But first I want to tell you that this episode is sponsored anonymously in memory of Jack Rose and his son Paul Lawrence Rose, and is dedicated to the themes of Jewish survival, renewal, and education that permeate their lives and their work. Jack Rose's parents and siblings were gassed in Nazi death camps. After serving with the Allies, he rebuilt his life in the UK, becoming principal of Blackburn College of Technology and Design, and a robotics pioneer and publishing many books. Honored by the Queen and UNESCO, Jack eventually reconnected to Israel, traveling often to the Jewish homeland. His son Paul transformed that legacy into scholarship as a leading historian of German culture and antisemitism. Before his 2014 death, Paul was editing a definitive manuscript, Antisemitism's, Tracing the Evolution of Antisemitism. Both men were known for their warmth, generosity, and marvelous humor. In the spirit of renewal through education, the sponsors of this episode would also like to invite you to learn about Gan Condesa, I hope I'm pronouncing that right, in Mexico City. After decades of Jewish life migrating to the gated suburbs, Gan Condesa is reclaiming a presence in the city's walkable cultural heart. Through its thriving Montessori and expanding community center, it is reconnecting unaffiliated families to their Jewish heritage. Visit ganmexico.com, g-a-n-mexico.com to donate or invest in this permanent Jewish home in North America's largest city. Thank you so much for that absolutely marvelous and poignant sponsorship and dedication. I also would like to invite everybody to join our Patreon. For one thing, it helps us keep the lights on and keep doing what we're doing. But for another, it's where we get a lot of the topics and issues and questions that this podcast tackles, including now people asking to focus a little bit on elections and what it all means and what this year will mean for Israel's future. If you want to ask those questions, guide the topics we choose to talk about, join us. You also get to be part of the monthly live streams where I answer your questions live. The link is in the show notes. The link is All right, so let's get right into it. The elephant in the room, I mean, it's Israeli politics. Let's start with the first of the 11 elephants in the room. You have launched a new party. You were once part of the Israeli political establishment on the political left. Does that mean that you don't see your view, what you think in the current constellation of parties? What does that tell us? What's missing in all the other parties? How do you think about that? That is precisely what it means. The reason that I even did something like that, which is, again, not a simple step, is I've noticed that the way the Jews tell their story in the last two and a half years, it goes like this. If you ask Jews, for example, what are you doing? What's your profession? They will say things like, I used to do this, this, this and that, and then October 7th. And it's almost a universal Jewish phenomena. It is a moment after which many Jewish lives, I'm not talking about those that were taken, but just everywhere took a different direction. And in that sense, I'm no different. A few things happened to me after October 7th. The first is, I realized, I think like many Israelis, that the notion that we can outsource our politics, we can outsource our public service, that we can have great lives and politics will be the playground of, shall we say, mediocrities, that collapsed entirely. So that was one realization that at the end of the day, this is ours. And if we do not take ownership of it, if we don't have the best of us going into politics and public service, then the very thing that was created is in existential danger. That was one aspect. The other is that I realized that many, many more people, this is also, I know your experience, have been willing to listen to what I've been writing and saying for many years about what the conflict is actually about. What we need to look for. How do we need to stop running away from problems? How do we actually address the core of the conflict rather than looking for shortcuts and band-aids? And I also realized one more thing is that I remember it is a very odd feeling of day by day, I realized that it was very clear to me what needed to be done. I realized that it was not just that my analysis in the last 20 years became incredibly relevant. Obviously, I thought it was always relevant. That's why I devoted so much time to it. But I realized that it gave me the insight to policymaking, that I actually knew what I would do every single moment from October 7th on if I were in a position of power. And here I will say something that might sound a bit odd. At one point, I'd actually felt as if it was no longer a choice. It was just the thing that I had to do. I had to go back in there and it had to be as the chair of a new party because after October 7th, something else was needed. And it wasn't even, it wasn't even to be very specific, but that from that disaster, from that whole bun, we had to emerge as a different people. We had to go through a transformation process. You know, I talk a lot about the Palestinian Arabs needing to go through a transformation of their entire identity and ideology for there to be peace. And sometimes people tell me, hey, not you talk about what they need to go through. Aren't you asking anything of us? And I remember thinking, I'm asking of us the hardest possible thing because people used to, when people say, are you asking a thing of us? They mean you're asking, you're not asking us to end the occupation or remove settlements or get rid of baby. And I'm like, I'm asking something much harder. I'm asking us to go through a transformation that for a very long time we were running away from. And as a result, we had the leaders that fitted who we were, people who ran away from problems. You know, people talk about, oh, October 7th happened because we were divided. And I was like, if anything, it happened because we were too united and too unified in our refusal to address problems directly in our addiction to the possibility that you can buy another minute of calm by pushing money to the Palestinians, to Israel's Arabs, to the Chiradis. And I'd like to believe, and I think it's true, that at least a share of the Israeli public, a substantial share, is fed up with that and wants as much as it's hard. I understand the appeal of running away from problems, but enough of us, I think, understand the need to become the people who don't run away from problems. Do you think that the Israeli leadership on all sides of the aisle, you're critiquing everybody from, you know, Yergolein to Lapid to Lieberman to Netanyahu to Smotrich? This is your view of, you called them mediocrities. Do you think they don't understand that? Why don't you trust them? I mean, yes, they're the same people, right? It's the same Netanyahu, it's the same Lapid. But why don't you trust them to be aware that transformation is necessary, that we can't just keep doing what we were doing before? What I'm seeing, and this is also backed up increasingly by numbers. You know, if you read Israeli polls in Israel, and you see all these nice bars organized, you actually get the bizarre impression that everyone already knows who's are voting for. They've decided, and the only thing that remains is to optimize the votes of each camp. But I don't know why it is, but I think it was explained to me by someone that it's very expensive to do it. But in Israel, unlike, for example, in American elections, if people say, I don't know who I'm voting for, I haven't decided, it's none of the parties you gave me, all that goes into the garbage. And then the polls that you see in the papers on television every week, basically give you a false image that everyone has decided. I compare it to looking at Instagram and seeing everyone living their best lives with bikinis at Bora Bora, and you're like, I guess I'm the only person with a super dull life. So you look at the polls and you're like, I guess I'm the only person who hasn't decided it. Everyone's already kind of found their political help. So I want to tackle this directly. Yes. Yes, famously, at least famously among us Israeli political pundits, I don't know are thrown out of the poll, the assumption being if you really don't know, you're not coming to the polls. And that's, that's silly, because there are quite a few elections where the pollsters are very surprised. And that's the mechanism by which they're surprised often. And often there's a party that catches the protest vote. Most famously, the pensioners party. Comes out of nowhere to get what seven seats, eight seats, some astonishing number. Out of just 120, we have a small parliament, eight seats is a significant number. But so I have to ask this as bluntly as possible. Do you have a chance? Do you do you really think your position to collect out of people who don't know, but you think will nevertheless show up on election day? Enough of these voters, where do you think you're going to draw them from? And you need three and a quarter percent, you need almost four Knesset seats just to have a single Knesset seat. I mean, you go from zero to four according to the electoral threshold rules. Can you pull together three and a quarter percent of the population of the voters? The short answer is yes. And I'll explain by what logic. So one of the things that we explain to people, and you also alluded to that, we're definitely startups. So we're not denying that we're a startup, but we're a startup with the potential to be a unicorn. And the unicorn is, indeed, most polls put it at 20 percent, which you know is a very high number, some 10 percent, some 30 percent. It's not just haven't decided. It's people who deeply don't know. And the reason that they don't know who they're going to vote for is not that there are some clueless people. It's that they can't bridge this vast gap between the visceral sense that after October 7th, it can't be that we'll carry on as we did, that everything remains the same, that it's the same people, the same conversation. So the gap between the senses, something profound has to change. But it hasn't gotten political expression. That's the opportunity. Why do I think that specifically oath party can give the response is because it's not just the ideas that we bring to the table. It's the fact that those ideas reflect a certain attitude. They reflect an attitude that says we can be so much better. And in many ways, we have to be so much better that this moment of horban means that a world is gone and never will be the same. And can we meet that moment rather than blindly trying to stay in a world that no longer exists? Do we understand that we can't run away from problems anymore? Anyone who lived on this earth a few years knows problems have a bizarre tendency that if you run away from them, they don't disappear. And especially if you throw more money at them, they just grow. And then we want hope. A lot of people have a sense of despair, but it comes from the desire to have hope. But they want hope that is no longer based on delusions and lies. So I think we are uniquely positioned to respond to this moment. And as I said, I would have never done it under any other conditions. I mean, as I said, it didn't feel like a choice. It felt like almost like this in any moment. There's a moment, there's a calling, and I respond to it. So I think there's an opportunity. I think the ideas I bring to the table, the attitude that I bring to the table, that are such that are uniquely positioned to answer this moment. Is it guaranteed? Of course not. Is it a massive challenge? Of course. But I have to share with you, Javier, every day I'm in Huge Bayt every single day, every day. Home, home gathering, home parlor meetings, which I love. They're like the backbone of Israeli politics. I love it. It's like old school politics. I say that I'm AI proofing my political campaign. I'm actually meeting people directly at homes. I'm talking at post at podcasts. I'm doing the things that actually meet people and speak to people and doing it break by break, stone by stone. Because again, I also think this is the attitude we have to adopt with the Palestinians, with the Chirides, domestically in Israel, this willingness to have a long term vision, but then to address it day by day, hard work by hard work. So and I'm seeing, I'm seeing the desire. I'm seeing the thirst every single day. So I say that it's the only thing worth doing. Could it fail? Of course. But if it succeeds, it's so worth doing. Who is your voter in your imagination? And I ask that in a very specific context. Yet your lapides voters are overrepresented in the Tel Aviv, Sankular, in fact the single biggest correlator for whether you voted for a current opposition party or a current coalition party is your religious observance level as a Jew. Obviously, Rahm, the very conservative religious Muslim party in the opposition, a little bit of throws that out of out of whack. But other than Rahm, the level of religious observance, you're more observant, you vote for the coalition, you less observant, you vote for the opposition. Yesh Atid is heavily Ashkenazi, Likud's base is heavily Mizrachi. Shass is a Mizrachi-Haredi party. UTJ is a Ashkenazi-Haredi party. These are tribes. These are ethnic religious, you know, cultural tribes. And Israelis vote very tribally. And you're coming in with a almost a cultural message, a policy message. Can you break the tribalism? Or maybe your campaign is, look, Yeir Lapid is polling at, I don't know, five to ten seats less than he currently has in the Knesset. There's some wandering Yeir Lapid voters that are headed over to Bennett potentially. Are you looking to make headway in that space as a centrist? What is your sense of who that voter is? You teed it up beautifully because you remember the 1984, I think, Apple commercial where, you know, they were throwing kind of the big thing at Big Brother, which was Microsoft. What was that, an axe or a hammer or something? Yeah, exactly. And in many ways, you're right. What I realize at one point that what I'm trying to do and are a lovely growing team of volunteers is we're really trying to do something that is not just get a few seats. We're trying to do something that is very different. And part of it is if I were to recreate that commercialized, I would put all the identity politics that you just described, all these kind of tribes, and just throw an axe into it. Because that's what we're doing. We're doing a saying, actually, it's already broken. You know, one of my favorite visions of what change leadership and visionary leadership is all about. It's not that a visionary leader comes along and says, Ha, this is my vision. Follow me. One of the theories I like most is actually says that the people that we call change leaders or visionary leaders, they don't change anything. They merely see and recognize that the change has already happened. And they give it words and they give it language and they give it shape and vision. But the change has already happened. They just see it. And I think what you just described already broke. And it already broke for enough people, clearly not for everybody. But it already broke for enough people that some that creates a soil for something else to grow. And it means that with the oath party, we can actually create a new political home that doesn't fall into these places that actually allows people to go to a new political home. When they've already left, what I've noticed is a lot of people who come to these Huge Bayt, these home parlor meetings, they're already they've already left their previous political homes. They're already done. They're sick and tired of the Gushim. They don't want to the blocks. They won't. Yeah, they don't want to talk about yes, Netanyahu, not Netanyahu. This is also why a lot of the people I speak to skew younger, they come from a desert of ideas and they're done. They are the generation that had to fight for the country. They want to know what they're fighting for. And it can't be leaders who tell them you're fighting for this identity or this identity. They want to know that they're fighting for the best that Israel can be. Remember that military ad, I'm going back to ads from the 80s and 90s, you know, be all you can be, right? They want to fight for it. They saw, even though it was a moment of terrible loss and Khurban, they saw Israel at its best. And they know that when Israel is at its best and you know that, there's no other place like it. And and they want that. And when all they hear is him that we need to join together so that we can beat him. And like, they're like, no, we want, we want someone who will give language and vision to the best that Israel can be because we already saw it. And this these tribes have already been broken, because, as you know, wars change societies and once war changed and broke something, there's no going back. I like, you know, half-flightedly to say, you know, after World War One, they had to give women the vote. That was it. They couldn't, you know, there was only so much they could do to stop it at that moment. Something broke in that war. Something tribal broke in that war. People who saw it, I think, a bit like, and it's weird to talk about how terrible war is as a moment where people saw something beautiful. But what they saw is what Israel can be at its best. And they want to capture it into the future. And and that's and again, I think what you described is exactly the world that is no longer it's the world of yesterday, our favorite book, it's the world of yesterday. And yes, a lot of people still cling to it and try to speak the language of yesterday. But enough people are no longer there, that this is what we're giving shape and language to. OK, so you're focusing me in a way that I wasn't focused on young voters, voters who served in this war in Lebanon or Gaza or flew over Iran or wherever they were. I personally have talked to countless, countless soldiers coming back home who are disgusted by the politics. And those young people probably are, to some extent, we don't yet know how a movable demographic. And at the undecided, we don't know what October 7 did. We don't know scientifically. We don't know in in hard polling what October 7 did. So if someone says I'm undecided now, we literally don't know what that means. Maybe they're definitely coming to vote, maybe a third of the electorate is of the voters that will actually be there on election day are the undecided. All right, so let's get into specific issues. Let's get into how you think they're going to play out and what you think actually needs to happen. And what can happen? A major, major question that it has has the possibility of the potential to decide this coalition, excuse me, to decide this election is the Kharedi draft. The ultra-orthodox draft is something that we know for a fact mobilizes opposition voters. We know for a fact is something that deeply divides not just Likud voters among Likud voters. In the inner soul of an individual Likud voter, there is this divide for quite a few of them. There is a serious questioning of Likud itself. And we also know that a lot of what's happening now with this debate of will we pass an ultra-orthodox draft or will we not pass it is gamesmanship ahead of the elections, right? The ultra-orthodox parties can't afford to sit in a coalition that passes a draft law that forces a draft. So they're going to have to leave beforehand and that might topple the coalition and call early elections. On the other hand, that might be a great way for Netanyahu to go to early elections while giving the ultra-orthodox parties the chance to stand their ground and risk at all on the question that might mobilize their own base and because their base is mobilized theoretically against Netanyahu. But nevertheless, we're giving Netanyahu a larger Kharedi base after the election with which to build the next coalition with the Kharedi base, right? Can a draft law pass ahead of time? Is it if one passes, is it better for the opposition, better for the coalition? How do you see that all playing out? What should happen? And finally, is it literally physically possible to draft the tens of thousands of actual young men that the army says it needs? So let's start from the end. I talked about wars changing societies, that wars accelerate processes, expose situations that, again, you can't continue to pretend as if it didn't happen. The Kharedi issue is clearly key. It's important to mention here, especially your listeners know that the Israeli Kharedi way of life has nothing to do with God, Torah, Mitzvot. It is literally a way of life that has been created since the 80s, the 1980s, based on, I would say, an entirely perverse incentive system that uses Yeshiva as ways to dodge drafts, that incentivizes people not to work, that funds a way of life that is inherently unproductive for the state of Israel. These are all things that people knew, spoke about, knew that at one point we'd have to deal with them. They knew that it is theoretically unsustainable. But again, there's something about how humans address problems that, yeah, they can know that it's a problem, but until it like literally explodes in your face, you're not going to deal with it. And what happened on October 7th, I personally did not have any illusions, but a lot of people you mentioned the liquid voters, you mentioned the Tsunud, the Tete voters, they truly believed that the ultra-Orthodox, the Israeli Kharedis, if it will be existential for Israel, they will mobilize. They were our brothers, that was the vision, that was the sense, that they're behaving that way as long as it's not existential, but if it's existential, the Kharedi men will go under the stretcher. They'll help carry the weight of the existence of the state of Israel. And it didn't happen. Yes, there were a few individuals, but by and large, not only that it didn't happen, and I'm not talking just about going to the military front, going to the hospitals, working with those who were injured, like some other way of mobilizing for Israel. And you remember, Israel was mobilized. I mean, there was no state, there was no government, there was no leadership, but there was a people. There was the mobilization from the ground. And in that, the Kharedis were absent. And not only were they absent, what followed was a continuous process in which their leaders and their people, you can't just put it on the leaders, their political leaders, while sitting in government that sends other people's children to death, were busy securing the privileges of their children to not fight. Once you see that, you don't unsee it. Yes, there are a lot of people trying to make people to forget it and unsee it. And but again, wars accelerate processes, expose divisions, that is something that you can no longer unsee. What can you do? I mean, the Kharedi welfare state is very simple. Once the Kharedi parties are, I mean, the extra welfare state, the fact that a Kharedi household in the same situation, through all kinds of clever tricks, because Kharedi parties in the coalition, like funding for local city municipalities, through various interior ministry or ministry of Negiw and Galilee or all these other ways, the ordinary Kharedi family at the same socioeconomic level as the poor, let's say Arab family or non-Kharidic Jewish family gets much, much more from the state. That is a documented fact. It's in the data of the finance ministry and everything tank that deals with this issue. You can cut that. You can simply cut that. You can equalize. You can bring it down. You can demand work in exchange for, you know, negative income tax instead of just a welfare payment, which means the person has to work in order to get the extra grant. You can do all kinds of things that have been done in the past in the Kharedi community that drove a significant uptake of work, of just rates of participation in the workforce. But draft? How do you physically draft people who have built out? Yeah, okay, I agree with you. By the way, sort of in the Jewish sources, in the Jewish sources, there's not only nothing that says you don't serve, if it's a defensive war, a mandatory war of of of of Pekochnifish, of saving lives, you're required by Jewish law from the Torah itself, pre-Tolmudic, the highest level of law possible in the Jewish legal system to serve. And it's a whole new, by the way, and Kharedim served in the 40s and 50s and 60s and 70s. Kharedi soldiers died in the 48 war for the founding of the state of Israel and nobody questioned it. And so, yes, I completely agree with you, but their entire culture is now built against it. They have built out vast religious explanations for it. And I don't think they're going to just show up at the draft office, are they? So, what the second of the three principles of us parties called public services to those who serve the public. And it's exactly what you talked about. One of the arguments we say is that just discussing the drafting of Kharedimen is too small. We are basically saying this is an opportunity to discuss the connection between the Israeli welfare state and what it means for us to have the solidarity and common values that underpin. The whole idea of a welfare state, as you know very well, as we move from family to tribe to the national welfare state, is that underpinning it is a sense of trust, solidarity and common values. Everywhere in the world where common values and a sense of trust and solidarity begin to erode, so follows the erosion of the welfare state. So, this is the moment to say quite simply, everyone in Israel, and when I say everyone, I mean everyone, women, men, Jews of all kinds and Arabs, receive a draft notice. Everything civic, we need teachers, we need Zaka, we need paramedics, goes under the military draft. People go to the Bakum, the Bakum tells them we need you to... The induction base. Yes, sorry, induction base, you go there, you take military uniform, the English word is instructive, everyone is in uniform, even if you go to be a teacher or a Zaka or police or hospitals, you're all in uniform, your length of service is the same, you're all subject to military judicial kind of area. So, the idea is that everything goes under military service, people have charged me and I accept the charge happily, that I'm trying to revive the Ben-Gurion idea of the military, not just as a machine of war, but as a nation builder. I absolutely agree, I think we need to be there once more, just broader. And the thing is this, if you refuse to serve your country, I compare you to the wicked son of the Haggadah. You're basically saying this is yours, I have nothing to do with it, this is not mine, and then you remove yourself completely from the entire mechanism of the welfare state and any service from healthcare to the university to public transportation, you will have to pay full, full, full, full price for it. I'm sorry to interrupt, just Israeli university educations are two-thirds subsidized in the public universities, you just said that a person actually will lose significant subsidies across a field of things that currently exist in the Israeli economy, which is what people understand, we're talking about a lot of money that you would no longer be eligible for because you didn't do this military service. Precisely, and this is where this actually reduces the opposition, because I recently was in a talk, very interesting by Yosef Hadaad, people know him, he's considering establishing a party and I sincerely hope he will, and really to have an Arab party in Israel that is clearly Zionist and serves the country, and he talked about his choice to volunteer for Golan, to actually be a fighter in the Israeli military, and he talks about how when he made that decision, because in Israel the Arabs are a priori told you don't have to serve, but you can then volunteer, so he decided to volunteer and everyone asked him every single day, are you sure, are you sure, are you sure, and every time he was like 100%, a thousand percent, a million percent, but think about how much this requires from the individual. Now imagine that the state is saying, and by the way, a lot of Charedes actually tell me, hey, not this will never go through negotiations, understanding, only if you actually draw the line will anything ever change, just you know, just as Zionist state enabled it, who actually needs to withdraw this perverse incentive system. So once you, you don't make it up to the individual, it's not that the individual Charedi or the individual Arab citizen has to volunteer against the kind of the values and ethos of his society, but basically you tell him, you're drafted, and if you refuse to arrive at the Bakum, you will pay throughout your life a very, very high price. This actually removes the burden from the individual, allowing them to go to the rabbi and say, look, if I don't serve, I won't be able to like hold a family, I won't have a Shiduch, I want right now it's the opposite. And that is how you force change. Now I have no doubt that some of the Charedes will raise the walls even higher, and they will say like the Edda Charedi to the small sect, we're going to take nothing from the Zionist state and we're going to give nothing. I will say that this I can respect. There's a reason that the Edda Charedi is so small, because there's only so large a community, you can sustain when it's dependent on the donations of three wealthy Jews from America, when it's dependent on the wealth and beneficence of the Zionist welfare state, sure, you can have a million people have that way of life. But if it's not, and you even have to pay the services at the very full and subsidized price, yes, there will be a few fanatic true believers, but the vast majority will revert back to being Israelis, Charedes, some not, but you serve, you work, you have general education and you pay taxes. As we say in Hebrew, the technology exists. I have to say that even the ones who take nothing and give nothing still take a tremendous amount. They're still safe because there's an army and police, and they still, when they get sick, go to a doctor funded by the rest of the taxpayers and the rest of the system. Let me just ask, why does it have to be the army? And this is specifically a place where I personally have been making a point for a long time that it doesn't have to be the army. In other words, my argument against the Charedi claim that there's a religious need to exempt themselves from military service is that they could be doing massive national service of people who are not seriously studying in Yeshiva. And the national service could be in the framework of national civilian national service, something that, for example, the religious Zionist community, which has a is way overrepresented in the death toll in this war. It's young men mostly, and it's young women, many of them have a religious problem serving in the military. So what they do is they volunteer en masse, many thousands each cohort to be national service teachers in disadvantaged schools in poor towns. Now, to me, that model is extraordinary, marvelous, amazing. I'm a big fan of it. And if the Charedi were serious, that they have a religious problem serving in the military, they would turn the fact that they have built some of the finest and largest medical charities in Israel, rescue charities in Israel like Zaka, like Yad Zara, into a national service organization that's totally Charedi in lifestyle and does it. The fact that they won't even do that tells me they're not looking for solutions, tells me it's not a serious debate about being part of the country. It's, it's something else. It's something a lot more sort of petty, and it's just welfare. It's the way that your psychology is warped under a welfare system and welfare incentives. And so that's been my argument. And now you're saying no uniforms, everybody's in uniform. Everybody's part of this symbolic thing. Everybody strips their regular clothes, their religious attire and puts on the Israeli state symbolic uniform. And I'll just extend that to the Arab community. Depending on the news cycle, between 20 and 40% of Arab Israelis say that their number one identity is Israeli. Many of them say their number one identity is Palestinian or Muslim or different things. But there's a significant portion, a quarter to a third roughly, that say nowhere Israeli first before where anything else, they would probably be comfortable with that. And in fact, the fact that they're forced to do it, but make it easier to do it, and they want you to force them to do it. But Yosef Chadad represents more than just himself, I think. And I don't just think we have good polling on this over many, many years. But what about the ones who are the opposite? What about the ones who are deeply Palestinian in their own self nationalist Palestinian, the ballad voters in their own self that you're going to force them into an Israeli military uniform? I'm definitely going to force the choice. And yes, that's exactly the idea. The reason that gone against the idea of a national service, which is not under military jurisdiction, not in uniform as a separate element, that is the exclusive kind of priority of certain sectors. Because as a member of Knesset, I saw it up close. I saw the lies. And in the spirit of no longer running away from problems, no longer telling lies. What I saw first of all is the whole lie of, you know, the military a la carte to fit the Chorati, you know, you enter Chorati, you come out Chorati, what a bizarre promise made by the military. They can't even promise people that they enter alive and come out alive. What does it mean for them for an organization of the state to promise people that they will remain unchanged at the most transformative moment in their lives in the military? And I saw how so many lies were told, like people who no longer wanted to be Chorati were forced to remain because the military made a promise to the Yeshiva. Like it is so insane. And I saw, I learned again, I'm not excluding that a lot of people, especially religious women, had valuable and meaningful national service. But I saw how as an institution, it was again hijacked by so many to again, just take money for the state in order to continue to not give. What's fake about? I know that there's a real program. I know that there are real ones doing real things. And you said that. What's the fake part? And also on the Chorati military draft, we know that it's very small. It's not succeeding in terms of growth. But is the thing itself also not real in some way? Yes. So first on the Chorati thing, what you described as a part of all the lies, because a lot of these young men already didn't want to be in the Chorati world. But this was a way for everyone to tell a lie. Israel could say we drafted Chorati and forced them to remain Chorati in certain clothing and habits, even though they were personally already out the door. And then the Yeshiva could say, look, we Israel's drafting. And it was just a lie that led nowhere. And by now, again, we have enough data to know that it changed nothing. You know, it didn't grow. People said, we'll start in a group. But if you build something on lies, nothing valuable can grow. In terms of the national service for women, as a woman here, I will say, I find it preposterous that it is assumed, you know, there's this, they compare often levels of service and groups. And I'm like, if you include women, there's only one group that actually fully serves in the military. And that is Israel's Masorti and Chiloni people. And like, as a woman, the more modern Israelis, non religious. Sorry, I find it preposterous and unacceptable that it is understood that some women are just drafted, no questions asked. And some have a choice. You know, we just had here a little thing when Smotrich said that if his daughter wanted to volunteer to draft, he would recommend or try to convince her not to. And Danny Boulair, who was very good, kind of the social media commentator in Israel said, I will actually definitely support my daughter in her being drafted. And then he gave it a great twist. And he said, but if she, but if I even wanted to convince her not to, nobody's asking me, because she will be drafted. She's not one of the people who gets to choose. So the notion that based on we go back to like throwing an accident identity politics, the notion that certain sectors and certain that secure privileges to like decide yes or not to serve. That's the thing that I find preposterous. And also the notion, yes, Israel need teachers a lot. Why is it therefore that the teachers will come from a particular sector? Let's do it the opposite. Everyone gets drafted. The military can certainly be considered and some people invest on risk portfolio and personal needs. They are sent to be teachers, but it's not based on your specific sector and identity. It's based on how much you fit and what's the right thing. And then you become, as my mother was a teacher, a soldier teacher. And that was a great way for Israel to have a great cohort of teachers who just remain teachers after the military. So for me, it's very clear that this has to be for everyone and also bringing all these hospital teaching Zaka under the military removes it from the notion of identity politics, removes it from sectorial divisions, really creates the notion that this is the Israel Defense Forces. This is the service of the state of Israel. Everyone is a citizen. Everyone serves. And again, you might end up having a more civilian type of service, but your level of service, your length of service will be equal for all. You will be subject to the military rules. You will be in uniform. Yes, I actually think it matters greatly that your family will see you put on the uniform. Your village, your town will see you put on the uniform. Yes, part of how I started, we need that the notion of nation building, we are now at this moment once more. And that's how you do it. Let's close out with two political questions. One, nobody has a victory. We don't know about the, as we talked about the underside is the people say don't know. But nevertheless, it looks like a hung parliament. So you're going to have a Jewish majority opposition, what is currently opposition that will pull about 54 give or take according to polls right now, a Jewish majority, what is today coalition parties that will that will probably pull 52 53 at the moment, as we record, and a middle ground of Arab parties that will probably be that entire middle ground. First of all, I got to throw it out there. Where would you be if you had to be put in if the media had to put you in one of those two boxes? That's exactly it, neither. And I think that's also the we're not have we're having yesterday's discussion, the blocks, this block, this block, I think this has fundamentally broken. So I actually don't think yes, there are the Kimber block system changes as long as the 10 years still there as long as Lapid is still there. Yes, a lot of voters are the fundamental question they're asked a lot of Bennett's polls, bold voters, not yet voting voters, but the polling, the people who say in the polls, they'll vote for him. A lot of them are looking for a credible right wing hawkish alternative to an it's a no, it's about not voting for an it's a no. As long as the same people are there, how can it not be the same block sort of culture theory, you know, mindset? So first, the question is, will it be the same people? I don't think that will be the case, precisely because everything we talked about in the beginning, I think something foundational has shifted. And you're right. Sometimes things don't get immediate political expression. Sometimes it takes another election, but something has fundamentally shifted. I will say even more than that, the notion of politically organizing our politics, our media, our campaigns, I would say our brain cells around these blocks around yes or no Netanyahu. Again, what I see is a deep, deep, deep exhaustion with that conversation. So I don't know, you're right that it remains for 70, 80 percent of the population, still a very powerful motivator, but in elections, you only need 20 percent of the voters to substantially change how they think about the issues about what they care about and their priorities for things to shift completely. And so you already touched on my my last question. 73, the 73 war and had a shock through the system. It was an incredible shock to the system. But the very same Prime Minister who oversaw that war and who was blamed by much of the public for the failures of that war, one reelection in the aftermath of that war. And it took another election, a second election, another four year cycle for a fundamental political shift to come into being partly as an aftershock of that war. There was a different way of building the coalition on the opposition side. But 77 election, the real revolution in Israeli politics when the Mapa'i party lost for the first time in 29 years, as it as partly as significantly in outgrowth of the 73 war, took two elections to express itself after the second Intifada. You know, yes, the labor party collapsed in 2001. But what took over the Likud that took over wasn't yet it was just literally the last people standing because the second Intifada scrambled everybody's brains and everybody's votes. And it wasn't yet a new political order. It took a couple of elections to get to a new understanding to the unilateral withdrawal paradigm to Sharon to all knit to that, right? And I would argue that Netanyahu's return to politics to the Prime Minister's office 2009 was a function of the Second Lebanon War. So again, it took a few years. If this isn't the moment of expression, we don't know what those young people who just went through these wars who just came out of Gaza, watching the Knesset members bickering over the same old stupid things, while they served and put their lives on the line, we don't yet know what their significance will be in the political system. It's completely reasonable to assume as you do, that it'll be very significant that they're genuinely discussed. We know they're discussed, but we don't know what that means actionably. What if it takes another election or two more elections to actually express itself? Are you if you don't get in this time, are you continuing to run? Are you still going to be there? So first of all, one of the things that's special about because a lot of time was essentially stretched, we don't have a situation of like the immediate snap elections after 73 at 74 and then another three years. We actually had three, we're going to have three, three years after October 7th by the election. So in many ways, you could argue that that's already in many ways the second elections. But as I said, it hasn't none of what I'm doing right now has been by planning, by design. It's been me responding to a moment, responding to a sense of having something to offer at a particular moment. And if I still feel that I have something to offer going forward, I will continue to offer it. And if I feel the no, the no, but I am, for me, it's about responding to the needs of the moment and doing my best to kind of give it my all. Hey, Nat, thank you for joining me. It's going to be a rocky road this year in this election. It's going to be poignant and powerful, and incredibly painful. Expect a very difficult election campaign. And we're going to be talking about fundamental things and maybe just that, that alone is the silver lining of this moment. Thank you for joining me and launching our political coverage with this conversation. Thank you for the honor.