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The General Zionists () were a centrist movement and a political party in Israel. The General Zionists supported the leadership of and their views were largely colored by central European culture.

(2026). 9780521038270, Cambridge University Press. .
The party was considered to have both and wings,
(1998). 9781400822362, Princeton University Press. .
(2026). 9780300044942, Yale University Press. .
(2026). 9780521193788, Cambridge University Press. .
and is one of the ancestors of the modern-day .


History
The term "General Zionism" initially referred to the beliefs of the majority of members of the Zionist Organization (ZO) who had not joined a specific faction or party and belonged to their countrywide Zionist organizations only. The term was first used at the 1907 to describe the delegates who were affiliated with neither nor religious Zionism.
(2026). 9781623710330, Interlink Publishing. .

In 1922, various non-aligned groups and individuals established the Organization of General Zionists as a non-ideological party within the Zionist Organization (later the World Zionist Organization) at a time when the Zionist movement was becoming polarized between and Revisionist Zionism. Eventually the General Zionists became identified with European and beliefs in and .

In 1929, the General Zionists established a world organization, holding their first conference in 1931. At this conference, rifts opened up between the conservative right wing and those who held more moderate views. They were divided over social issues, economics and labour issues (e.g. the ). The "General Zionists A" favored the economic policies of Labour Zionism and were supportive of 's compromising approach to relations with the British. The "General Zionists B" were skeptical of socialism and more outspoken against British policy in Palestine.

(2026). 9781135966423, Routledge. .

After the independence of the State of Israel, the gap between the two groups widened. The General Zionists A helped form the Progressive Party, which won five seats in 1949 Knesset elections and entered the Mapai-led governing coalition. The General Zionists B, running as the General Zionists, won seven seats and chose to remain in the opposition. In the years following the establishment of the state of in 1948, the General Zionists moved towards the right in opposition to the hegemony of and other Labour Zionist movements in Israeli politics.

The General Zionist party supported private enterprise, the suspension of state support to collective institutions, and the termination of the 's control of the economy. However, it favored leaving the Histadrut with state control over several aspects of economy and welfare. It also supported a unified system of education (as it contributed to the passage of the 1953 State Education Law) and a written constitution to enshrine democratic freedom and civil rights. It was , though not as vocally so as the Progressive Party.

(1970). 9780838675670, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. .

In 1936 the General Zionists established a daily newspaper, , which was edited for the first ten years of its existence by . It ceased publication in 1965.


Political activity in Israel
The General Zionists entered the elections for the first Knesset in 1949. They won 5.2% of the vote and seven seats, and were not included in either of 's coalition governments.

The 1951 elections were a huge success, with the party winning 20 seats, making it the second largest in the . The party was enlarged soon after the elections when the Sephardim and Oriental Communities party and the Yemenite Association merged into it (though the one Yemenite Association MK left the party again before the end of the session). Although it was not included in the coalition for the third government, it was brought into the fourth government after Ben-Gurion had sacked the parties, and Poalei Agudat Yisrael, over the religious education dispute that had brought down the previous government. It was also included in 's fifth government, but not the sixth.

In the 1955 elections the party slumped to 13 seats, and were not included in either of the third Knesset's coalition governments.

A further slump to eight seats in the 1959 elections and exclusion from the coalition made the party rethink its strategy. Eventually the party decided to merge with the 6-seat Progressive Party to form the Liberal Party. Nevertheless, the party helped bring down the government in 1961 when it and tabled a motion of no confidence in the government over the .

In the 1961 elections the new Israel Liberal Party won 17 seats, making it the third largest in the Knesset. During the session, ten MKs (mostly former General Zionists) merged with the right-wing to form while the other seven (most from the Progressive Party) set up the Independent Liberals. Gahal later became .


Leaders
1 19491961
2 19491955
3 19551961


Election results

Assembly of Representatives elections
19312,8415.744th new
19444,7042.377th


Knesset elections
1949
22,6615.25th
1951111,39416.22nd 13
195587,09910.23rd 7
1959
59,7006.25th 5
1961Part of the Liberal Party 1


See also


External links


Further reading
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