Pubdate: Mon, 09 Dec 2002 Source: Jerusalem Post (Israel) Copyright: 2002,sThe Jerusalem Post Contact: http://www.jpost.co.il/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/516 Author: Daniel Ben-tal And Nina Gilbert 'GREEN LEAF' ON A ROLL The mainstream pollsters aren't saying it, but Boaz Wachtel of the Green Leaf Party ("Aleh Yarok") believes that he will serve as a member of the next Knesset. "I think we're going to be the surprise of these elections," he told The Jerusalem Post Sunday. According to party treasurer Shai Hakim, a Green Leaf-commissioned Gal Hadash (formerly Gallop) poll predicts 2.5 percent of the electorate voting for the party on January 28, with another 4% still undecided. "We wonder whether Mina Tzemah even asks about Green Leaf," he said. Unscientific straw polls are meanwhile producing even more startling results the party invariably registers at least 3% and received 8% in a poll conducted by a Kfar Saba local newspaper last week. Aleh Yarok, which promotes drug legalization, came close to producing the shock of the last Knesset elections, mustering 34,029 votes representing just over 1% of the electorate only 15,000 votes short of the 1.5% threshold for Knesset membership. The Green Leaf Party's 15-member leadership met Sunday night to set its Knesset list, with founder Wachtel assigned the top slot. Dan Goldenblatt, an attorney originally from Canada, was considered a favorite for the No. 2 slot, and Renen Mosenson for third. The party is to unveil its campaign on Tuesday at a Tel Aviv nightclub. Party spokesman Dror Nissan said the party is confident of winning the "protest vote" and surpassing the electoral threshold. He said polls don't reflect support for the party, as pollsters either ignore the party or potential voters are afraid to reveal their voting plans on the phone. Party leaders admit that they have to contend with a 'not serious' image: One radio announcer quipped last week that arsonists had attacked the party's headquarters and that neighbors reported a pleasant feeling. "We view ourselves foremost as a public health and civil rights party with three central platforms: civil rights and personal freedom, ecology, and the legalization of cannabis," countered Wachtel. "A vote for us is far more than a protest vote." "I think the party has matured," said Hakim. "It's been through the development stage, and now has its eyes firmly set on the Knesset. The atmosphere has become far more serious and focused." The party's headquarters, a sublet two-room office in Tel Aviv's Rehov Brenner, was buzzing with activity yesterday. "We're getting 50-60 e-mails a day from people who want to help and the phones don't stop ringing," exclaimed Hakim. "Things are starting to move." Volunteers man three telephone lines throughout the day. "We can't keep up. We need four more lines, but Bezeq is demanding a NIS 5,000 guarantee per line, probably because of their previous experience with political parties. We simply don't have NIS 20,000." The party's total election budget is a trifling NIS 150,000, said Hakim. "That's why you don't see enormous billboards with our logo we simply can't afford such luxuries. "Our only income is from donations. We still haven't raised the sum, so activists lent the party money from their own pockets. We are all volunteers." n February, six party activists attended (at their own expense) a three-day seminar in Berlin hosted by the German Greens dealing with the logistics of running a political party. "We learned how to conduct an effective elective campaign with minimal resources. They helped us a lot by pointing out their mistakes," Hakim said. Green Leaf's election campaign will be based on its activists, he explained. "We have active branches from Eilat to Rosh Pina, including university campuses. The stickers and fliers are ready, and the first batch of rolled-up banners just arrived from the printers today. One guideline to our activities will be litter prevention we're an ecological movement and fully intend to remove all our garbage after the elections. See if the other parties do that!" Most of the volunteers are Israeli-born Jews with a background in some form of social activism, said Hakim. "Green Leaf remains an anti-establishment party. We want the people represented in the Knesset instead of rich corporations and religious pressure groups," he said. The party intends to emphasize issues other than drug legalization. "Whoever reads our manifesto to our sorrow few voters ever do is always impressed. It expresses a desire to change fundamental aspects of this country. Ecology is strongly emphasized there is still time to undo historical mistakes. Funds must be allocated to the periphery, to counter the social gap. We call for separation of religion and state 75% of the population believes in that and propose a referendum to finalize borders of the country. It's time to let the people choose," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D