President Rivlin:
“The main consideration that will guide me in selecting a candidate to entrust with forming a government is the chance of the selected Knesset Member to form a government that will secure the confidence of the Knesset. A government that will heal the divisions between us and rebuild Israeli society, which has suffered such a grievous blow because of the coronavirus pandemic.”
“Israeli society needs a government that will pass a budget, that will lead a process where the symptoms and the citizens who have been harmed are made better, and where the institutions of the state are rescued from the political stalemate that we found ourselves in precisely at the time when Israel’s citizens need them more than ever.”
“I truly hope that the elected officials, representatives of the public, are able to hear the Israeli people and their call for out-of-the-ordinary coalitions, collaborations that cross sectors, working in a serious and dedicated way for the good of all of Israel’s citizens.”
“The political crisis that is shaking us is harming and weakening our democracy to a certain extent, but it will not beat us. We are stronger than it. Israeli society is stronger than it.”
President of Israel Reuven (Ruvi) Rivlin today, Wednesday 31 March / 18 Nissan, received the official results of the elections to the 24th Knesset from chairman of the Central Elections Committee Judge Uzi Fogelman, in an official ceremony today at Beit HaNasi. CEO of the committee, Adv. Orly Ades, and members of the committee also participated in the event.
President Rivlin’s remarks in full:
“I have not yet completed seven years of my term as president, and yet this is the fifth time I am receiving results of elections to the Knesset, and the fourth time in less than two years. There is no need to elaborate on the complicated situation that Israeli society and politics find themselves in, but we must not forget that elections to the Knesset are a prime example of our statehood, the ‘holy of holies’ of our democracy. This is the clearest way the public can make its voice heard and elect its representatives. And, for that reason, we must not take this moment lightly.
You, members of the Central Elections Committee, headed by chairman Judge Uzi Fogelman and CEO Orly Ades, have been required to work in an extraordinary way. In a short time-frame, and in the eye of the unprecedented health crisis, you succeeded in setting up an election system that was accessible to those in isolation, the sick, citizens at risk and afraid – and rightly so – of exposure to the deadly virus. Moreover, you worked in climate of tension and suspicion, at home and abroad, that threatens to cast doubt on the professionalism of the gate-keepers, including yourselves, who are entrusted with ensuring clean elections and giving official validity to their results. You, dear friends of the committee, carried out your sacred work with professionalism, seriousness, with a true and genuine sense of mission, on behalf of the Israeli people and the laws of the Jewish and democratic State of Israel. We, the citizens of the State of Israel, can only thank you for your faithful service and willingly accept the results that you are presenting here today as the official results of the elections to the 24th Knesset, as the voice of the Israeli people.
In the days ahead, as I am required according to Basic Law: The Government, I will receive here at Beit HaNasi, the home of the Israeli people, representatives of the parties elected to the Knesset, and I will consider who is the candidate with the best chance of forming a government. Menachem Begin, of blessed memory, said that ‘even the obvious needs stating from time to time’, and so let me be clear, as it is clear to us all, that after consultations with the parties in the Knesset, the main consideration that will guide me in selecting a candidate to entrust with forming a government is the chance of the selected Knesset Member to form a government that will secure the confidence of the Knesset. A government that will heal the divisions between us and rebuild Israeli society, which has suffered such a grievous blow because of the coronavirus pandemic. Israeli society needs a government that will pass a budget, that will lead a process where the symptoms and the citizens who have been harmed are made better, and where the institutions of the state are rescued from the political stalemate that we found ourselves in precisely at the time when Israel’s citizens need them more than ever.
The political crisis that is shaking us is harming and weakening our democracy to a certain extent, but it will not beat us. We are stronger than it. Israeli society is stronger than it. I truly hope that the elected officials, representatives of the public, are able to hear the Israeli people and their call for out-of-the-ordinary coalitions, collaborations that cross sectors, working in a serious and dedicated way for the good of all of Israel’s citizens. That is what we will look at in the forthcoming consultations that will be held here, in this house, in the near future. Thank you, and Moadim leSimcha to you, your families and to all Israel. Bless you.”