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d-23077House OversightOther

Labor leader reflects on media criticism and hypothetical Palestinian identity (1998)

The passage is a personal recollection without concrete allegations, names of wrongdoing, financial transactions, or actionable leads. It mentions political figures only in general terms and provides Labor leader describes media perception of his communication style. He recounts a controversial interview where he hypothetically imagined being a Palestinian terrorist Mentions internal poll perform

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #011777
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a personal recollection without concrete allegations, names of wrongdoing, financial transactions, or actionable leads. It mentions political figures only in general terms and provides Labor leader describes media perception of his communication style. He recounts a controversial interview where he hypothetically imagined being a Palestinian terrorist Mentions internal poll perform

Tags

public-statementslabor-partyisraeli-politicsmedia-criticismhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
/ BARAK / 20 before me, provoked more left-wing parties like Meretz to suggest that if I really wanted peace, I’d be ready to give away more, and more quickly. My position wasn’t helped by the way I had come over in the media during my first months as Labor leader. A number of newspaper commentators wrote that while they found talking with me stimulating, I seemed to be operating in a world of my own, either unable or unwilling to give straight answers and a single, clear message. They were right about that. If asked a question, especially one which obviously involved an issus of nuance, my instinct was not to come up with a sound bite. It was, as best I could, to answer fully and accurately. The difficulties that could sometime cause hit home in an interview with a leading Israeli journalist in the spring of 1998. He asked how my life might have turned out if I’d been born and raised not as a kibbutznik, but a Palestinian. I answered: “At some stage, I would have entered one of the terror organizations and fought from there, and later would certainly have tried to influence from within the political system.” I did hasten to add that I abhorred terrorists, describing their actions as “abominable... villainous.” But that was lost in the political storm that followed. All I’d done was answer as honestly I could. What if I had been one of the Palestinian babies in Wadi Khawaret, but with the same mind and same impulses that had defined my life as an Israeli? I assumed that instead of becoming an Israeli soldier and politician, I would have become the closest thing to a Palestinian equivalent. Still, as even my brother-in-law, Doron Cohen, told me when he phoned a couple of hours later, it was not the most astute thing to say as a potential candidate for Prime Minister. None of this might have mattered if I’d been able to show I was bringing Labor nearer to defeating Bibi. But the only measure of progress that the media paid attention to was the opinion polls. Briefly, in late 1977, I did pull ahead, during the period leading up to Bibi’s agreement to pull out of most of Hebron. But for much of 1998, I was running behind, and questions about my leadership surfaced publicly by the summer. The media commentators spoke of the need for a Labor “liftoff.” Why, after a full year as leader, had I failed to deliver it? 306

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