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בידידות,
רמי 73
JERUSALEM–She is already the first woman to serve as Israel's foreign minister since Golda Meir some four decades ago.
Now Tzipi Livni, 50, is poised to follow in Meir's footsteps yet again as she prepares to take on the job of Israel's prime minister, after winning the leadership of the centrist Kadima party yesterday.
"The good guys won," Livni told party supporters after exit polls gave her a clear margin over retired general Shaul Mofaz, the transport minister.
In order to gain this country's top political post, Livni must first manage to hold together a four-party coalition that has governed Israel for the past 2 1/2 years – either that, or patch together a new coalition.
If successful, the lawyer-turned-politician would represent a striking contrast to those who typically enjoy high political office in this country – "middle-aged men with military backgrounds," according to academic and pollster Tamar Hermann.
Although Livni served in the military for a time and later carried out undisclosed missions as a Paris-based agent for Mossad – Israel's foreign intelligence service – she is not primarily known for the security-related entries on her extensive résumé.
In another contrast to at least some senior Israeli politicians of recent memory – including Ehud Olmert, the outgoing prime minister who has been hounded by allegations of corrupt dealings – Livni's reputation is free of even the slightest taint of financial wrongdoing.
"Livni is 100 per cent honest, incorruptible," said Emanuel Gutmann, emeritus professor of political science at Hebrew University.
Married with two sons – one 20, the other 18 – Livni entered politics in 1999 after practising as a lawyer for 10 years in Tel Aviv, when she specialized in commercial, constitutional and real estate law.
היי מיקי,
אכן שאלות כבדות משקל אך היא בכל זאת מעוניינת ונקווה שהיא תצליח למרות הכל!!
יפה!*