Knesset The
Knesset is Israel's
unicameral legislature and is seated in Jerusalem. Its 120 members are elected to 4-year terms through
party-list proportional representation (
see electoral system, below), as mandated by the 1958 Basic Law: The Knesset. Knesset seats are allocated among parties using the
D'Hondt method of
party list proportional representation. Parties select candidates using a
closed list. Thus, voters select the party of their choice, rather than any specific candidate. Israel requires a party to meet an
election threshold of 3.25% to be allocated a Knesset seat. All Israeli citizens 18 years of age and older may participate in legislative elections, which are conducted by
secret ballot. As the
legislative branch of the Israeli government, the Knesset has the power to enact and repeal all laws. It enjoys
de jure parliamentary supremacy, and can pass any law by a simple majority, even one that might arguably conflict with a
Basic Law, unless it has specific conditions for its modification. The Knesset can adopt and amend Basic Laws acting through its capacity as a
Constituent Assembly. The Knesset also supervises government activities through its committees, nominates the
Prime Minister and approves the
cabinet, and elects the
President of the State and the
State Comptroller. It also has the power to remove the President and State Comptroller from office, revoke the immunity of its members, and to dissolve itself and call new elections. The
February 2009 elections produced five prominent
political parties;
Kadima,
Likud,
Israel Beytenu,
Labor and
Shas, each with more than ten seats in the Knesset. Three of these parties were ruling parties in the past. However, only once has a single party held the 61 seats needed for a majority government (the
Alignment from 1968 until the
1969 elections). Therefore, aside from that one exception, since 1948 Israeli governments have always comprised
coalitions. As of 2009, there are 12 political parties represented in the Knesset, spanning both the political and religious spectra.
Electoral system Israel's electoral system operates within the parameters of a Basic Law (
The Knesset) and of the 1969
Knesset Elections Law. The Knesset's 120 members are elected by secret ballot to 4-year terms, although the Knesset may decide to call for new elections before the end of the 4-year term, and a government can change without a general election; since the 1988 election, no Knesset has finished its 4-year term. In addition a
motion of no confidence may be called. Voting in general elections takes place using the
highest averages method of
party-list proportional representation, using the
d'Hondt formula. General elections use
closed lists: voters vote only for party lists and cannot affect the order of candidates within the lists. Since the 1992
Parties Law, only registered parties may stand. There are no separate electoral districts; all voters vote on the same party lists.
Suffrage is universal among Israeli citizens aged 18 years or older. Voting is optional. Polling locations are open throughout Israel; absentee ballots are limited to diplomatic staff and the
merchant marine. While each party attains one seat for 1 in 120 votes, there is a minimum threshold of 3.25% for parties to attain their first seat in an election. This requirement aimed to bar smaller parties from parliament but spurred some parties to join simply to overcome the threshold. The low vote-threshold for entry into parliament, as well as the need for parties with small numbers of seats to form coalition governments, results in a highly fragmented political spectrum, with small parties exercising extensive power (relative to their electoral support) within coalitions. The president selects the prime minister as the party leader most able to form a government, based on the number of parliament seats their coalition has won. After the president's selection, the prime minister has forty-five days to form a government. The Knesset collectively must approve the members of the cabinet. This electoral system, inherited from the
Yishuv (Jewish settlement organization during the
British Mandate), makes it very difficult for any party to gain a working majority in the Knesset and thus governments generally form on the basis of coalitions. Due to the difficulties in holding coalitions together, elections often occur earlier than scheduled. The average life-span of an Israeli government is about two years. Over the years, the peace process, the role of religion in the state, and political scandals have caused coalitions to break apart or have produced early elections. ==Judicial system==