Likud
(Redirected from HaLikud)
Likud, Hebrew: הליכוד - HaLikud, meaning The Consolidation, (official name: HaLikud-National Liberal Movement), commonly called Likud, is an Israeli political party.
Its ideology is right-wing conservative liberal,[1] nationalist, and Zionist.
Political leader is Benjamin Netanyahu (Prime Minister 1996–1999; 2009–2021).
Likud was founded in 1973 as a a result of an alliance (and later on a merger in 1988) of six liberal and nationalist parties, like Gahal, Herut and the Liberal Party.
Founders were Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir.
Number of seats in the 24th Knesset: 29 (-7).
Participating in the Fourth Netanyahu Government and the Netanyahu-Gantz Government.
References
- ↑ Experimental Studies of Interactive Decisions, Amnon Rapoport, Kluwer Academic, ISBN 0792306856, 1990, page 413: "Likud is a liberal-conservative party that gains much of its support from the lower and middle classes, and promotes free enterprise, nationalism, and expansionism."