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- Q18205025 subject Q6292570.
- Q18205025 subject Q8258241.
- Q18205025 abstract "The Arab satellite lists or Arab lists were Israeli Arab electoral lists formed for the purposes of electoral support of Mapai (and later the Labor Party), Mapam and the General Zionists between 1948 and the mid 1970s. Between the 1949 elections and the 1969 elections, most of the Israeli Arab vote was divided between the communist parties Maki and Rakah (an Arab-dominated breakaway from Maki in 1965, recognised by the Soviet Union as the official communist party) and the Arab satellite lists. Maki and Rakah were considered the only parties to truly represent Arab interests until the Progressive List for Peace won two seats in the 1984 elections.The existence of the Arab lists was partially because Arabs were barred from membership of Mapai until 1973. Unlike normal political parties, they were not active between elections. Most of the lists survived more than one term, and all were subservient to the policies of their patron Mapai.According to Ilana Kaufman, the Arab lists; "were not proper parties but ad hoc electoral arrangements for the election of Arabs to the Knesset." Majid Al Haj writes that the object of the lists "was not the political mobilization of the Arab populations but rather the capture of Arab votes."The Labor Party withdrew its support from its last satellite list, the United Arab List, prior to the 1981 elections. The Alignment, an alliance of the Labor Party and Mapam, saw its share of the Arab vote triple in the elections, whilst the UAL failed to cross the electoral threshold. The Arab Democratic Party, established in 1988 as a breakaway from the Labor Party, effectively took their place in the political sphere.".
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q1137968.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428864.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q1453052.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q1674684.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q1887828.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2028557.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q204333.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q210703.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2383903.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2579409.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2777435.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2827200.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2890121.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2915302.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916163.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916230.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916425.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916428.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2917008.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2917025.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2919169.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q2919789.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q618652.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q6292570.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q7229665.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q7278.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q773654.
- Q18205025 wikiPageWikiLink Q8258241.
- Q18205025 comment "The Arab satellite lists or Arab lists were Israeli Arab electoral lists formed for the purposes of electoral support of Mapai (and later the Labor Party), Mapam and the General Zionists between 1948 and the mid 1970s. Between the 1949 elections and the 1969 elections, most of the Israeli Arab vote was divided between the communist parties Maki and Rakah (an Arab-dominated breakaway from Maki in 1965, recognised by the Soviet Union as the official communist party) and the Arab satellite lists.".
- Q18205025 label "Arab satellite lists".