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Alignment (Israel)

Alignment
המערך
Historical leaders Levi Eshkol (1965–68, 69)
Golda Meir (1969–74)
Yitzhak Rabin (1974–77)
Shimon Peres (1977–91)
Founded 1965 (first Alignment)
1969 (second Alignment)
Dissolved 1968 (first Alignment)
1991 (second Alignment)
Merged into Israeli Labor Party
Ideology Social democracy
Labor Zionism
Political position Centre-left
International affiliation Socialist International
Member parties Mapai, Ahdut HaAvoda and Mapam
Most MKs 63 (1969)
Fewest MKs 31 (1977–1980)
Election symbol
אמת

The Alignment (Hebrew: המערך‎, translit. HaMa'arakh) is the name of two political alliances in Israel. Each of these Alignment parties later merged into what is now the Israeli Labor Party.

The first Alignment was a 1965 alliance of Mapai and Ahdut HaAvoda. The two parties continued to exist independently, but submitted joint electoral lists. Often called the Labor Alignment, the alliance lasted three years until a merger with Rafi in 1968 created the unitary Israeli Labor Party.

The following year the Labor Party formed an alliance with Mapam, adopting the Alignment name. The two constituent parties remained separate, but with combined electoral campaigns and candidate lists. The second version of the Alignment lasted for more than two decades.

At its formation in 1969, the second Alignment had 63 of 120 Knesset seats, the only time a parliamentary group in Israel has ever held a parliamentary majority. Although their majority was lost in the 1969 elections, the 56 seats won by the Alignment remains the highest seat total won in an Israeli election.

The first incarnation of the Alignment, fully named the HaMa'arakh LeAhdut Poalei Eretz Yisrael (Hebrew: המערך לאחדות פועלי ארץ ישראל‎‎, lit. Alignment for the Unity of the Workers of the Land of Israel), was an alliance of Mapai and Ahdut HaAvoda formed to contest the 1965 Knesset elections. Its formation was in response to the merger of the two major right-wing parties in Israel, Herut and the Liberal Party to form Gahal, and to try to preserve the left's hegemony in Israeli politics.


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