Now, Haaretz is reporting, Ehud Barak is trying to lure Mitzna back into active Labor Party politics. Perhaps, they suggest, as his successor. Mitzna, like Barak, is a former general, though he has a rather dovish record for an IDF general, and clearly Labor is struggling to find a future leader.
But is one of its worst-performing candidates ever the right answer? Labor, of course, is not its old self. Likud is the ruling party; Kadima heads the opposition. Barak has brought Labor into an uncomfortable coalition. The party that utterly dominated Israeli politics from 1948-1977, the party of David Ben-Gurion, Moshe Sharrett, Levi Eshkol, Golda Meir, Shimon Peres, and Yitzhak Rabin, has seen leaders like Mitzna, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, and Amir Peretz. (If you said "Who?" to any of the last three, you're not alone.) If Barak's best hope for the party is to woo Mitzna back to a leadership role, or to try to forge a new leftist bloc around him, it may be a sad indicator of how far downward Labor has come. Kadima is full of people who spent their career in Likud, but is oddly enough now the opposition in Israel.
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