Yiud

Ji'ud (Hebrew יעוד, German Mission ) was in the mid 1990s, a political party in Israel.

The Ji'ud was founded on 7 February 1994 during the 13th legislative session. At that time, the three left Knesset members Alex Goldfarb, Esther Salmovitz and Gonen Segev, the ultra - nationalist party Tzomet, the conservative views represented in the defense and foreign policy, but liberal acted in domestic politics, after they had fallen out with the party chairman Rafael Eitan. In a phase in which Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, a majority of the Oslo agreement sought, the Ji'ud Party joined Rabin's government. Alex Goldfarb was appointed on January 2, 1995 Deputy Minister of Construction and Housing (English Deputy Minister of Housing and Construction), while Gonen Segev on 9 January 1995 Minister of Energy and Infrastructure (English Minister of Energy and Infrastructure ) was. The few months later approval by Segev and his party colleague Goldfarb in the Knesset to the " Oslo B" Agreement came into the media and public criticism: The Ji'ud Party was accused of having allowed themselves to be bribed with ministerial posts, and Segev was considered a " turncoat " ( Der Spiegel). After Rabin's assassination on 4 November 1995 Ji'ud belonged to the subsequent government of Shimon Peres.

On November 27, 1995 Goldfarb and Salmovitz left the Ji'ud Party to form the party Atid. Henceforth, Segev was the only Ji'ud Party member of the Knesset. Goldfarb and Segev, which now belonged to different parties exercised their ministerial posts until the end of the legislature on 18 June 1996. The Ji'ud subsequently took no more part in elections and disbanded.

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