On July 9, the seven-year term of the current president of the State of Israel, Reuven Rivlin, will come to an end. The former Likud Party member and speaker of the Knesset has served our country well during turbulent times. He led the Knesset during several no-confidence motions, the debates about the Goldstone Report initiated by the anti-Israel United Nations Human Rights Council, the Gaza flotilla incident led by the MV Marmara and its consequences, and presided over the most recent war with the terrorist regime in Gaza, as well as many more noteworthy events.
As president, it fell to Rivlin to mandate the potential prime ministers following the unprecedented four general elections in just over two years. Unfortunately, it is a distinct possibility that after the fourth election last March, no government will be able to be formed and that it will now be the duty of the next president, who’s first duty will be to make the difficult choice of tasking a Knesset member with the formation of a government, following a fifth election in October of this year.
The presidency is a largely ceremonial position, wielding little real power and should ideally not be held by a former politician. President Rivlin was a career politician, and that became apparent in some of his actions.
The Israeli public is far more politically informed and intelligent than our politicians believe them to be, or indeed would prefer them to be. Israelis don’t believe that another career politician should be their president. They believe that Miriam Peretz, a teacher by profession who lives in Givat Ze’ev and works as a civil servant at the Education Ministry, best understands the trials and tribulations of ordinary people. Politicians, on the other hand, live in a world spiked with personal animosities and schemes to impose damage on their political opponents. Not exactly the qualities needed in our state president. The Knesset’s decision to elect Miriam Peretz, of Mizrachi origin as our first woman president would be a welcome step, contributing to the equality of opportunity for all our citizens.