THE ISRAEL PROJECT
Jerusalem
to Elect New Mayor Nov. 11
Profiles:
Jerusalem
’s Top Mayoral Candidates
Jerusalem
by the Numbers
Israelis and Palestinians are scheduled to go to the polls Tuesday to choose a new mayor and city council for
Jerusalem
and decide new leaders for cities throughout the country. [1]
Unlike elections, in the mayor and city council members run under the banner of political parties. The three major candidates vying for the Jerusalem mayor’s seat are high-tech entrepreneur Nir Barkat, running as an independent; Russian émigré and philanthropist Arkadi Gaydamak for the Social Justice party; and Meir Porush, a Knesset (Israeli parliament) member and ultra-Orthodox rabbi, for the United Torah Judaism party. The mayor serves a five-year term.
Jerusalem Mayor Uri Lupolianski, a rabbi and the city’s first ultra-Orthodox Jewish mayor, is completing his first term[2] and is not running for reelection. Lupolianski, a member of the United Torah Judaism party, is founder of one of the largest volunteer organizations in Israel, Yad Sarah, which provides free and low-cost medical services for those in need.[3]
Jerusalem,
’s capital, is home to three of the world's major religions: Judaism, Islam and Christianity. The 48-square-mile city – ’s largest – has a population of 733,000.[4] Some of the city’s most pressing concerns are the high cost of housing; poverty; scarcity of employment; and its diminishing Jewish middle class.[5] All men and women have freedom of speech, the press, religion and access to holy sites.
All citizens and permanent residents of
Jerusalem
are eligible to vote in the municipal elections, including Palestinians. The minimum voting age in
is 18.[6]
Elections also are being held in cities throughout Israel such as Tel Aviv, where Mayor Ron Huldai, a member of the “One Tel Aviv” list, a partnership between the Labor and Kadima parties, has three challengers: Knesset Member Dov Khenin, a member of the Hadash party running on the “Ir Lekulanu” (A City For All) list; Maj. Gen. (res.) Oren Shahor, an independent; and Peer Visner, deputy mayor and chairman of the Green party.[7]
’s former mayors are Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (1993-2003); Teddy Kollek (1965-1993); Mordechai Ish Shalom (1959-1965); Gershon Agron (1955-1959); Yitzhak Kariv (1952-1955); Shlomo Zalman Shragai (1951-1952); and Daniel Auster (1948-1950).[8]
Profiles:
Jerusalem
’s Top Mayoral Candidates
Nir Barkat
Nir Barkat, along with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, founded “Snunit,” a non-profit organization in that encourages using computers and targeted learning in elementary schools. Barkat also is a successful businessman who founded BRM, a computer software company and one of the first companies in the world to develop anti-virus software. In 2000 he was a founding partner of BRM Capital, a $150 million venture capital fund that focuses on software and communication infrastructure.
In 2003, Barkat ran for mayor of
Jerusalem
, gaining 43 percent of the vote but losing to Uri Lupolianski of the religious United Torah Judaism party. Barkat currently serves as a
Jerusalem
city council member heading up the opposition. During his tenure on the city council, Barkat helped establish “Start Up Jerusalem” which promotes job creation in areas where
Jerusalem
has a competitive edge and assists in the development of economic growth.[9] Barkat is emphasizing his economic experience in his pledge to alleviate poverty in
Jerusalem
.[10] He has promised to overhaul the city’s troubled light rail project, make housing more affordable and promote job creation. Barkat has also billed himself as the ‘secular candidate’ in opposition to ‘religious candidate’ Meir Porush.[11]
Arkadi Gaydamak
Russian-born entrepreneur Arkadi Gaydamak first came to in 1972, returning in 2000 after spending time in
. He owns several newspapers in and and recently became involved in the sports business, buying Beitar Jerusalem soccer club and investing in several other teams. Gaydamak has been one of the largest individual charitable donors in
since his return to the country, giving millions of dollars to aid organizations. In 2006, Gaydamak set up a tent city outside Nitzanim in southern as a refuge for northern citizens fleeing the Hezbollah rocket bombardment during ’s defensive war against Hezbollah, also known as the Second Lebanon War. He also funded a week-long vacation in Eilat in 2006 for hundreds of Sderot residents to give them respite from the ongoing rocket fire by Iran-backed terrorists in
Gaza
.[12]
Gaydamak founded his own party, Social Justice, in early 2007.[13] In his bid to become mayor of Jerusalem he is focusing on outreach and non-partisanship and is promising equal opportunities for education, housing and healthcare for the secular and religious, Arab and Jewish populations alike. Gaydamak is popular among Arabs in
East Jerusalem
, promising them “paradise” if he is elected; he also has made plans to build an international airport for Muslim pilgrims. He has met with several prominent East Jerusalemites to try to convince more Palestinians, who traditionally boycott
Jerusalem
’s municipal elections, to vote. Gaydamak’s campaign focuses on education reform within the city, providing housing assistance for young couples and vulnerable sectors of
Jerusalem
’s citizens, and improvement of the city’s infrastructure.[14]
Meir Porush
Rabbi Meir Porush is running for the religious Agudat
(Union of Israel) party, part of the United Torah Judaism (UTJ) party. He has been a member of Knesset (Israeli parliament) representing UTJ since 1996 and served two years in former prime minister Ariel Sharon’s cabinet as deputy minister of housing and construction. Porush has the backing of the city’s large ultra-religious Jewish population and also is trying to win support from the dwindling number of secular
Jerusalem
residents by promising to fix the city’s “central problems”: education, employment, housing and aesthetics. He said he not only intends to stop the exodus of secular Israelis from
Jerusalem
, but will work to bring 100,000 new residents, religious and secular, to the city within the next decade.[15]
Porush also has plans to revive the cultural and artistic character of
Jerusalem
that he says has been lost in the past few decades of heavy emigration. He cites his family’s long history in Jerusalem – seven generations by some accounts – as evidence that he knows the “true”
Jerusalem
and will be able to bring it back to its former cultural and religious glory. Porush is planning to solve the city’s economic and housing problems through substantial government involvement; he is proposing tax breaks for large corporations and enticements for entrepreneurs and small businesses. Porush cites his decade of service in the Knesset as fitting experience to implement these proposals.[16]
Jerusalem
by the Numbers
Population of
Jerusalem
by ethnic grouping:
- 481,000: Jews and others
- 252,000: Arabs
- Total Population: 733,000[17]
- 31.8 percent of the population is between 5-19[18]
- 32.5 percent of the population is between 20-44[19]
Places of worship in
Jerusalem
:[20]
- 72: Mosques
- 139: Churches
- 996: Synagogues
Tourism in
Jerusalem
:
- 66: Hotels, with a total of 9,107 rooms[21]
- 35: Hotels in
West Jerusalem
, with a total of 7,167 rooms[22]
- 31: Hotels in
East Jerusalem
, with a total of 1,950 rooms[23]
- 415,000: Foreign tourists visit
Jerusalem
in 2007[24]
- 167,000: Israelis visit
Jerusalem
in 2007[25]
School system:
- 524: Schools in
Jerusalem
[26]
- 163,913: Students registered in the Jerusalem Department of Education[27]
- 26: Average number of students per class[28]
Internal migration to and from
Jerusalem
in 2006:
- 10,600: People who migrated to
Jerusalem
[29]
- 17,600: People migrated from
Jerusalem
[30]
- From 1996 - 2006, 97,000 people migrated to
Jerusalem
while 163,400 left the city.[31]
Jerusalem
has been suffering a negative migration rate since 1988.[32]
[5] Kraft, Dina, “Diverse trio running for mayor in troubled
Jerusalem
,” The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, Oct. 22, 2008, http://www.jewishjournal.com/israel/article/diverse_trio_running_for_mayor_in_troubled_jerusalem_20081022/
[6] Goren, Yuval and Lis, Jonathan, “Police to deploy 10,000 officers on municipal election day,” Haaretz, Nov. 5, 2008, http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1034296.html
[12] “Arcadi Gaydamak,” One Jerusalem, Jan. 3, 2006, http://www.onejerusalem.com/2006/01/03/Arcadi-gaidamak-billionaire-sports-fan-newspaper-owner-arms-dealer-did-i-miss-anything/; Slier, Paula, “Gaydamak City is like being on vacation,” The Jerusalem Post, July 31, 2006, http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1153292043720&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull; Rettig, Haviv, “Peretz slams Gaydamak's Eilat offer,” The Jerusalem Post, Nov. 16, 2008, http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1162378411894&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
[14] Arnaout, Abd el Raouf, “Gaydamak Promises Arabs Paradise if Elected Jerusalem Mayor,” The Media Line, Oct. 13, 2008, http://www.themedialine.org/news/news_detail.asp?NewsID=22987; “Arcadi Gaydamak: My Ten Commandments for
Jerusalem
,” (Hebrew) website of Arcadi Gaydamak for Mayor, http://jerusalem-gaydamak.co.il/showpage.aspx?id=3, accessed Nov. 4, 2008
[20] The number of religious institutions in
Jerusalem
is unclear. There are no official figures regarding for the number of places of worship. Officials at the
Jerusalem
Municipality
and the Jerusalem Institute for studies offered rough estimates. The
Jerusalem
Municipality
based their number on the classification of municipality tax exemption which places of worship enjoy, whereas the numbers given by the Jerusalem Institute are based on figures garnered from a survey conducted between 1999 and 2000.
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