Movement for Civil Rights and Peace התנועה לזכויות האזרח ולשלום | |
---|---|
Leader | Shulamit Aloni Yossi Sarid Gabi Deus (de jure) |
Founded | 1973 |
Dissolved | 1997 (de facto) |
Split from | Alignment |
Merged into | Meretz |
Ideology | |
Political position | Left-wing[6] |
Most MKs | 6 (1992) |
Election symbol | |
רצ | |
Ratz (Hebrew: רָצ), officially the Movement for Civil Rights and Peace (Hebrew: הַתְּנוּעָה לִזְכוּיוֹת הָאֶזְרָח וְלַשָּׁלוֹם, HaTnua'a LeZkhuyot HaEzrah VeLaShalom) was a left-wing political party in Israel that focused on human rights, civil rights, and women's rights.[7][8][9] It was active from 1973 until its formal merger into Meretz in 1997. However, it remains a registered political party.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT (Rotz). This radical, dovish, and anticlerical party was founded in 1973 by Shulamit Aloni, a noted civil rights activist, who failed to win renomination on the Labor Party* ticket.
In terms of social and economic policy, Labor is a social democratic party; Mapam, the old socialist left; CRM is an Israeli-style Green party; and Shinui is what Terry Clark has described as Neo-Populist—fiscally conservative and liberal on life-style issues.
Hatnua Lezlmiot Haezrah (the Civil Rights Movement, or CRM) is primarily interested in protecting the secular character of the State of Israel and the civil rights of its citizens. The CRM advocates a liberal economic policy and a dovish stand in the Israeli-Arab conflict.