Hatnua התנועה | |
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Leader | Tzipi Livni[1] |
Founded | 27 November 2012[2] |
Dissolved | 18 February 2019 |
Split from | Kadima |
Headquarters | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Ideology | Liberalism Two-state solution Secularism Environmentalism Third Way Liberal Zionism |
Political position | Centre[3][4] to centre-left[5][6][7] |
National affiliation | Zionist Union (2014–2019) |
Colors | Blue, white |
Most MKs | 8 (2012) |
Fewest MKs | 5 (2016) |
Election symbol | |
צפ | |
Website | |
www.hatnua.org.il | |
Hatnua (Hebrew: הַתְּנוּעָה, lit. 'The Movement')[8] was a liberal political party in Israel[9][10] formed by former Israeli Foreign Minister and Vice Prime Minister Tzipi Livni to present an alternative to voters frustrated by the stalemate in the Israeli–Palestinian peace process.[11]
The party was formed by dissidents in Kadima, which Livni, who had led the party's progressive wing,[12] headed until March 2012 when she lost a leadership primary election to rival Shaul Mofaz,[1] who was part of the party's more conservative wing.[13][14][15] The party was based on the infrastructure of Hetz, a faction that broke away from Shinui in 2006.[16] Relatively close in ideology to Yesh Atid and the Labor Party, which focused mostly on domestic and socioeconomic issues in their 2013 campaigns, Hatnua stood out for its aggressive push for a pragmatic peace settlement with the Palestinians.[17]
In the 2013 legislative election, Hatnua ran on a joint list with the Green Movement, and incorporated many of its core ideals into the party's platform.[18] Hatnua's 2013 platform emphasized Arab–Israeli peace, social justice, environmental protection, the integration of all citizens into the military and workforce, and religious pluralism.[19]
In the 2015 legislative election, it ran on a joint electoral list with the Labor Party called the Zionist Union, which became the second-largest parliamentary group. In January 2019, Labor chairman Avi Gabay announced that Labor would not run with Hatnua in the April 2019 election.[20] Following several weeks of poor poll results, Livni announced on 18 February 2019 that Hatnua would drop out of the election and that she was retiring from politics.[21]
The party is a liberal party that Israel did not had since 2006.
She quit the traditional Likud party of the right to join the Kadima centrists before she formed the liberal Hatnuah party. He's a socialist. Together, they head the centre-left Zionist Union, with a mantra 'to defend a Jewish and democratic state'.