Israel: Jerusalem mayor run-off sees victory for Leon
Ultra-Orthodox candidate Moshe Leon has declared victory in a run-off
for the position of Jerusalem Mayor, beating his secular opponent.

Moshe Leon, a conservative-religious candidate favoured by
recently-resigned defence minister Avigdor Lieberman, secured 51.5 per
cent of the vote to declare victory against his secular opponent Ofer
Berkovitch. Celebrating the victory, Leon said that “tonight Jerusalem
chose consolidation, unity, togetherness, and goodness. I plan, with the
help of God, to be a mayor for all the residents of Jerusalem,” Haaretz
reported.
An early vote count late last night seemed to indicate that Berkovitch
held a 15 per cent lead over Leon, but by the final count, Leon had
overtaken his rival to secure the candidacy. Yet Berkovitch refused to
concede defeat, claiming that there had been “many irregularities” in
the election and vowing that his legal team would review the results.
“There is a not-inconsiderable number of booths that we will thoroughly
examine,” he explained, adding “there is a reason we warned about a
power working against us aggressively, violently and on the borderline
of legality. We are not giving up on the chance of winning in this
round”.
It is thought that Jerusalem’s significant Haredi (ultra-Orthodox)
population swung the vote in Leon’s favour. The Agudat Yisrael party –
which largely represents the Ashkenazi (European) ultra-Orthodox
community – decided not to endorse either candidate, leaving some 30,000
voters to cast their decision freely. This, combined with the fact that
Leon enjoyed the backing of Shas and Degel HaTorah, two other political
parties representing ultra-Orthodox factions, is believed to have
clinched Leon’s victory over Berkovitch, who has traditionally opposed
preferential policies for the city’s Haredim.
Yesterday’s head to head comes after an earlier round of voting failed
to yield an outright victory. In this initial round, Jerusalem Affairs
Minister Ze’ev Elkin was knocked out of the running, despite previously
being slated as the front-runner. Elkin, the ruling Likud party’s
candidate who had received an endorsement from Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and Jerusalem’s current mayor Nir Barkat, came third
in October’s election.
However, the turn-out rate for yesterday’s re-run was significantly
lower than the October round, with only 31.5 per cent of Jerusalem’s
population turning out to vote. As is common in Jerusalem elections, the
city’s Palestinian population largely boycotted the vote, deeming the
process tantamount to normalisation of Israel’s illegal occupation of
the city.
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