Facebook
democracy: Israelis ‘share’ votes with Palestinians
A
snapshot of the Real Democracy movement's page on facebook.com
RT,
18
January, 2013
In
a move of high-tech civil disobedience, thousands of Israeli citizens
are donating their right to vote in the upcoming parliamentary
elections to their Palestinian neighbors via Facebook.
The
political initiative, called Real Democracy, so far has over 1,400
followers and is allowing Israelis to "donate" their votes
for the Palestinian cause, giving their second-class citizen
compatriots an opportunity to participate in general elections on
Tuesday.
The
founders of the initiative call their campaign “an
act of civil disobedience against … the undemocratic nature of
Israeli elections … the election of a government which controls
four million Palestinians without voting rights,"
quotes The Guardian.
The
goal is to take the action a step further and allow Palestinians a
potential say in the Israeli government’s
“de facto control over the United Nations Security Council.”
Around
a one and a half million Palestinians have Israeli citizenship, the
other roughly two and a half million living in the country fall under
the sovereignty of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, and of
Hamas in Gaza – and do not have an opportunity to vote in the
elections that ultimately influences their lives.
Participants
in the campaign say they are willing to go to the polling stations on
January 22 to cast their votes according to the decision of the
Palestinian to whom they gave their vote.
In
his video post supporting the campaign, Israeli Moriel Rothman says
he is “ashamed”
of how the Israeli government treats the Palestinian population,
surrendering his vote, saying, “I
will vote the way you tell me to vote.”
Haim
Barack Cohen, a lawyer from Tel Aviv, urged in his post the
destruction of all barriers, giving up his right to vote so that the
Palestinian people can have “equal
rights.”
One
of the men behind the movement, Shimri Zameret, says real democracy
should rise above borders. “Politics
transcends borders but governments are national. This is an attempt
to create a new form of politics,”
Zameret was quoted by The Guardian as saying.
The
Real Democracy movement follows a similar model, initiated in 2010 in
the UK, when a number of Britons agreed to donate their votes to
minorities in the country.
Israel
will hold parliamentary elections on January 22. The latest polls
show Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's bloc ahead of their
center-left opponents, with the right claiming 63 seats against 57
for the moderates, according to Dialogue service poll numbers.

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