Veteran Israeli anchor Yair Lapid leaves Channel 2 to enter politics
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                  Veteran Israeli anchor Yair Lapid leaves Channel 2 to enter politics

                  Israeli journalist Yair Lapid. Photo by: Nimrod Glickman (Haaretz.com)

                  Veteran Israeli anchor Yair Lapid leaves Channel 2 to enter politics

                  08.01.2012, Israel

                  Veteran Israeli journalist Yair Lapid announced Sunday he was leaving his longtime news anchor position at Channel 2 in order to compete in the next Israeli elections.
                  According to Channel 2, Lapid informed CEO Avi Weiss of his departure in order to enter the “public realm.” Weiss expressed regret over Lapid’s departure, but said he understood the decision.
                  It is unclear at this point which political party Lapid will seek to run under, although it is believed he will seek to run under a newly-established independent party.
                  Several recent surveys forecasted that a Lapid-led party could garner between 15 and 20 mandates in the Knesset.
                  A recent poll stated that a party headed by Lapid would become the second largest party in the Knesset.
                  According to the poll, if Lapid chooses to set up a new party, it would receive 15 Knesset seats in Israel’s next elections, as opposed to Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s party, Yisrael Beiteinu, which would receive 14 seats. Likud would remain the largest party in the Knesset, with 24 seats, and the Labor Party would tie in second place with Lapid’s party with 15 seats.
                  Kadima would lose the most seats in the next election, the poll results reveal, receiving only 10 seats as opposed to the 28 seats it received in the last election.
                  Moreover, the poll showed that should former Shas strongman Aryeh Deri set up his own party, he would receive 7 seats in the Knesset.
                  Should Lapid and Deri set up their parties and link with the center-left parties in the Knesset – such as Kadima, the Labor Party, Meretz, and the Arab parties, they would get 63 seats and a majority in the Knesset. On the other hand, the right-wing and ultra-Orthodox parties would get 57 seats, so in order to set up a coalition they would need to team up with one of the new parties or choose an exisiting centrist or leftist party.
                  Lapid - whose late father, Yosef Lapid, headed the Shinui party and served as justice minister under Ariel Sharon - is said to have been considering going into politics since the 2009 general election, but has denied it whenever asked.

                   

                  By Ophir Bar-Zohar, Jonathan Lis, Gili Izikovich and Nati Toker

                  Haaretz.com