Which party won the battle of the election campaign?
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                  World Jewish News

                  Which party won the battle of the election campaign?

                  Labor's Yacimovich at Dizengoff Center event Photo: Lahav Harkov

                  Which party won the battle of the election campaign?

                  25.01.2013, Israel

                  In the spirit of the forthcoming Superbowl, critics who complain about their team’s performance the day after a big game are known as Monday-morning quarterbacks. But in politics, everyone is a critic.
                  There were good and bad performances in the campaigns of the 12 parties that passed the threshold. Here is a report card for each of them.

                  Likud: D


                  What they did right: They highlighted the experience and skills of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and contrasted it with the other party leaders. While attacks on Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett boomeranged, attempts to portray the rest of the right-wing party’s list as extremist succeeded. Former foreign minister Avigdor Liberman cited a study indicating that some two-thirds of immigrants from the former Soviet Union voted for Likud Beytenu. Yisrael Beytenu also held rallies around the country in English.
                  What they did wrong: Had Netanyahu not made a deal with Yisrael Beytenu, the party might have disintegrated following Liberman’s indictment. The deal gave Yisrael Beytenu 15 slots that appeared realistic at the time and pushed back the slots reserved for Likud candidates from districts.
                  Those candidates are the political power-brokers who know how to bring out the voters, and once the Liberman deal was signed, their motivation was gone. The Likud relied too much on the Internet, which is a good way of connecting to people while bypassing the antagonistic media, but Likudniks apparently still want people to reach out to them face-to-faсe.

                  Yesh Atid: A+

                  What they did right: The smartest decision Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid made was excluding politicians from his party’s list of candidates, which allowed him to receive protest votes.
                  He drew up a list of quality people from varied backgrounds. His diplomatic speech in Ariel painted himself as a centrist and allowed him to take four seats away from Likud. Making clear that Yesh Atid would join the coalition made a vote for the party a practical step for moderating Netanyahu’s government, the same way a vote for Bayit Yehudi was seen as the way to move the government toward the Right. But his focus was on haredi service, changing the electoral system and helping the middle class, three issues Israelis proved they care much more about than the peace process.
                  What they did wrong: Yesh Atid was not ready on the day the television and radio election advertisements were released, which is the only time the ads receive a respectable rating. During the party’s allocated time that night, they twice aired a clip of Lapid warning of the socioeconomic time bomb at a conference, rather than explaining what the new party was about.

                  Labor: C

                  What they did right: The Christian Science Monitor ran a story that maligned Labor’s American strategist Stanley Greenberg for advising the party to focus solely on socioeconomic issues, but the strategy was actually correct. It was the implementation that was wrong. Drafting socioeconomic protest leaders Itzik Shmuly and Stav Shaffir and painting a vote for Labor as the completion of the “Israeli Spring” sparked by rallies revolving around cost-of-living issues was a smart move and motivated Labor’s young activists.
                  What they did wrong: Nevertheless, Labor did not implement its agenda wisely. They did not do enough to be seen as a serious alternative for people voting on socioeconomic in poor development towns, where Labor fared poorly. While it was right to focus on socioeconomic issues, the party should not have shunned Labor candidates with a diplomatic focus like Merav Michaeli and Yariv Oppenheimer. Yacimovich also should have done more to reach out to women voters.

                  Bayit Yehudi: B+

                  What they did right: It was wise to focus on the charismatic Bennett and the secular Ayelet Shaked and to talk about helping the poor rather than the settlers. The party stayed on message and its message was positive.
                  While quadrupling Bayit Yehudi’s seats was a formidable accomplishment, polls showed that had the election taken place a week before, the party would have won 15 or 16 seats. Hiding purported extremists on the list was also smart. Candidate Jeremy Gimpel did a good job reaching out to English speakers.
                  What they did wrong: Much of what hurt the party was beyond its control. There is nothing they could do about Eretz Nehederet, the satire show that made Bennett look like a latent extremist.
                  Netanyahu’s attack on Bennett and a report that maligned Gimpel both came out on Shabbat, when all but one of Bayit Yehudi’s candidates do not watch television.
                  Maybe Ayelet Shaked, who does, should have been made available to Ulpan Shishi, Channel 2’s flagship Friday night news program.
                  Bennett could have made a better deal with the National Union that would have put more extreme candidates further down the list.

                  Shas: C

                  What they did right: The muchmaligned 1-800-Conversion advertisement turned off some people, but it brought a lot of attention to the party and motivated its core constituency of Sephardim in development towns and poor neighborhoods, who are not necessarily ultra-Orthodox but like making fun of Russian immigrants distant from their faith. Focusing the party’s ads on Shas leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, rather than any of the triumvirate of politicians leading the party, was also wise.
                  Yosef’s hospitalization was obviously outside of the party’s control but it did put him back in the limelight.
                  What they did wrong: They highlighted Arye Deri too much. While charismatic, Deri is also a convicted felon who served jail time. While much of Shas’s constituency still considers him innocent, Deri might have turned off potential voters. Deri also flipflopped on key issues from the peace process to whether insulting Russian immigrants is a good or bad thing for the party.

                  United Torah Judaism: A

                  What they did right: They had unprotected sex. The more children they have, the more power they get. UTJ reached out to non-haredim by highlighting its faction’s socioeconomic legislation in its television ads, which were not watched by members of the party’s base, as many do not have televisions.
                  What they did wrong: In past elections, UTJ fielded a Sephardi candidate just beyond the number of MKs they had in the previous Knesset. In an election where many Shas voters were up for grabs, UTJ should have made an effort to win them. It also could have helped if more of an effort would have been made to silence anti-Zionist haredi leaders.

                  Meretz: A


                  What they did right: They were themselves. They were left-wing and proud of it, while other leftist parties pretended to be centrist. Their commercials were positive and uplifting. Moreover, they were wise to stay out of the fight in the Center-Left and let Livni, Lapid and Yacimovich attack each other mercilessly.
                  What they did wrong: Had their leading male candidate, Ilan Gilon, been less grumpy and more charismatic, they could have won votes that went to Yair Lapid. They did nothing too wrong this time. But they should not have let Livni steal their votes in the last election.

                  Tzipi Livni Party: F


                  What they did right: The party’s logo was very nice, and copying commercials from US President Barack Obama was cool. That’s about it.
                  What they did wrong: Let’s not go back in time to Livni’s failure to form a government twice or her acting like a sore loser when she quit the Knesset after Shaul Mofaz defeated her. Forming a new party rather than run together with Labor or Yesh Atid undermined Livni’s cause of advancing diplomatic talks with the Palestinians.
                  Had she run with Labor, she would have complemented Yacimovich and formed a formidable duo that it is now clearer than ever could have seriously challenged Likud Beytenu. She also gave way too many interviews, which made her look desperate.

                  Arab Parties: B


                  What they did right: Hadash had a smart radio advertisement in Hebrew that asked people on the street whether they were socialist and favored equality and asked them why they were voting for parties that do not support such ideals. The Arab League’s call for Arabs to vote was helpful.
                  What they did wrong: They failed to do enough to reach out to Hebrew speakers who ended up voting for Meretz. They crossed too many red lines in reaching out to Israel’s enemies in the Middle East rather than helping their actual constituency.

                  Kadima: B


                  What they did right: Their campaign billing themselves as the security party and calling for soldiers to be paid more resulted in them getting enough votes in the IDF to narrowly pass the threshold. The guilt trip ads comparing Shaul Mofaz to his less qualified competition were also effective.
                  What they did wrong: Their ads showing mayor after mayor saying they were voting for Mofaz were silly. The party should have put a woman higher on the list and attacked Livni more. MK Yisrael Hasson was not a good choice for second on the list because he is a security man like Mofaz and adds nothing to appeal to voters. MK Yohanan Plesner, who is younger, more charismatic and could have won secularist votes from Lapid, would have been a much better choice.

                  By GIL HOFFMAN

                  JPost.com