- Rafi (political party)
Rafi ( _he. רפ"י, an acronym for "Reshimat Poalei Yisrael" ( _he. רשימת פועלי ישראל), lit. "Israeli Workers List") was a left-wing political party in
Israel , founded by former Prime Minister,David Ben-Gurion in 1965. In 1968 it was one of three parties which merged to form theIsraeli Labor Party .Background
Rafi was founded on
14 July 1965 when David Ben-Gurion led a breakaway of eight MKs fromMapai , the ruling party, taking with himMoshe Dayan andShimon Peres amongst others. The split had two main causes; the first was the disagreements within Mapai over theLavon Affair ; Ben-Gurion did not agree to declaring Lavon innocent without judicial investigation committee. The second was the formation of the Labor Alignment by an alliance ofMapai andAhdut HaAvoda . The new party's establishment, a merger of two of the largest left-wing parties, was intended to delay planned reforms to the electoral system (i.e. to change from proportional representation to a constituency-based system) that were important to Ben-Gurion.The party ran for the 1965 elections on a platform of changing the electoral systems. Although Ben-Gurion hoped to displace the Labour Alignment as the leading left-wing party in the
Knesset , Rafi won only 10 seats. They were not included inLevi Eshkol 's coalition government until the formation of a government of national unity during theSix-Day War .On
23 January 1968 the party merged withAhdut HaAvoda andMapai to form theIsraeli Labor Party and ceased to exist as an independent entity. However, Ben-Gurion could not reconcile himself to the merger with his foes, and broke away from the party to sit as an independent MK for the rest of the Knesset session. Prior to the 1969 elections, he founded another new party, theNational List . However, after Ben-Gurion retired from politics in 1970 it fell apart, eventually merging with theFree Centre andGahal (led by Ben-Gurion's arch-rivalMenachem Begin ) to formLikud .The name Rafi was briefly resurrected during the ninth Knesset and again during the tenth Knesset when breakaways from Likud named themselves Rafi – National List. The party was later renamed Ometz.
Knesset Members
External links
* [http://www.knesset.gov.il/faction/eng/FactionPage_eng.asp?PG=74 Party history] Knesset website
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