Maki (political party)

(Redirected from Israeli Communist Party)

The Israeli Communist Party, commonly known by its Hebrew abbreviation Maki (Hebrew: מק״י), is a far-left, communist and anti-Zionist political party in Israel that forms part of the political alliance known as Hadash. It was originally known as Rakah (רק"ח), an acronym for Reshima Komunistit Hadasha ("New Communist List"), after breaking away from the original Maki in the 1960s.

Israeli Communist Party
המפלגה הקומוניסטית הישראלית
الحزب الشيوعي الاسرائيلي
LeadershipCentral committee
Founder
Founded1 September 1965 (1965-09-01)
Split fromMaki
HeadquartersNazareth, Tel Aviv
NewspaperAl-Ittihad
Youth wingAlliance of the Israeli Communist Youth
Ideology
Political positionFar-left
National affiliationHadash
International affiliationIMCWP
ColoursRed
Knesset
3 / 120
Election symbol
ו
Website
maki.org.il

History

Original logo of the party when it was named Rakah, or the New Communist List, in 1965
Rakah members in 1969

Rakah was formed on 1 September 1965 due to internal disagreements in Maki, the original Israeli Communist Party, which was split between a largely Jewish and Zionist faction led by Moshe Sneh that was critical of the Soviet Union's anti-Zionist stance, and a largely Arab faction that was increasingly anti-Zionist.

As a result, the pro-Arab/pro-Soviet faction (including Emile Habibi, Tawfik Toubi and Meir Vilner) left Maki to form a new party, Rakah, which the Soviet Union recognised as the "official" Communist Party. Shlomo Sand and Mahmoud Darwish were also Rakah activists.[7]

The Eurocommunist faction, led by Sneh, remained in Maki.[8] It was reported in the Soviet media that the Mikunis–Sneh group defected to the bourgeois-nationalist camp.[9]

The 1965 Israeli legislative election saw Rakah party win three seats, comprehensively beating Maki as it slumped to just one. Rakah's opposition to Zionism and the Six-Day War meant that they were excluded from the national unity governments of the sixth Knesset. In the 1969 Israeli legislative election Rakah again won three seats. During the 1973 Israeli legislative election Rakah saw a rise in support as the party picked up four seats.

Before the 1977 elections the party joined with some other small left-wing and Arab parties, including some members of the Israeli Black Panthers to form Hadash. After the original Maki had disappeared after merging into Ratz in 1981, members of Rakah decided to change the party's name to Maki in 1989.[10] The party remains the leading force in Hadash, and owns the Al-Ittihad newspaper.

Election results

ElectionLead candidateVotes%PositionSeats+/–Status
1965Meir Vilner27,4132.27New
3 / 120
3opposition
196938,8272.84 7th
3 / 120
opposition
197353,3533.41 6th
4 / 120
1opposition
1977Part of Hadash 5th
4 / 120
opposition
1981 5th
3 / 120
1opposition
1984 5th
3 / 120
opposition
1988 7th
3 / 120
opposition
1992Tawfiq Ziad 8th
2 / 120
1support
1996Ahmad Sa'dPart of HadashBalad 7th
2 / 120
opposition
1999Mohammad BarakehPart of Hadash 12th
3 / 120
1opposition
2003Part of Hadash–Ta'al 9th
2 / 120
1opposition
2006Part of Hadash 11th
2 / 120
opposition
2009 9th
3 / 120
1opposition
2013 10th
3 / 120
opposition
2015Aida Touma-SuleimanPart of the Joint List 3rd
4 / 120
1opposition
April 2019Part of Hadash–Ta'al 5th
3 / 120
1opposition
September 2019Part of the Joint List 3rd
4 / 120
1opposition
2020 3rd
4 / 120
opposition
2021 10th
2 / 120
2opposition
2022Part of Hadash–Ta'al 12th
3 / 120
1opposition

References

External links