Religious Zionist Party הציונות הדתית | |
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Chairman | Bezalel Smotrich |
Secretary-General | Ofir Sofer |
Founders | Hanan Porat Zvi Hendel |
Founded | 1998 |
Dissolved | 2023 |
Split from | National Religious Party |
Merged into | National Religious Party–Religious Zionism |
Headquarters | Beit HaShenhav Building, Jerusalem, Israel |
Ideology | |
Political position | Far-right[1][2][9][10][11][12] |
National affiliation | National Union (1999–2013) The Jewish Home (2013–2019) URWP (2019)[13] Yamina (2019, 2020–2021) |
Member parties | Otzma Yehudit (formerly) Noam (formerly) |
Most MKs | 7 (2022) |
Election symbol | |
ט ط [14] | |
Website | |
zionutdatit | |
This article is part of a series on |
Conservatism in Israel |
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The Religious Zionist Party (Hebrew: הציונות הדתית, romanized: HaTzionut HaDatit, lit. 'The Religious Zionism'), known as Tkuma (Hebrew: תקומה, lit. 'Revival')[15] until 2021 and officially known as National Union–Tkuma (Hebrew: האיחוד הלאומי-תקומה, HaIchud HaLeumi–Tkuma),[16] was a far-right,[1][2] ultra-nationalist,[2] Jewish supremacist,[2] and religious Zionist[1][2] political party in Israel.[17] In all the elections since its founding in 1998, the party had joined other factions and competed as part of a united list. In 2023, the Religious Zionist Party and The Jewish Home agreed to merge to become National Religious Party–Religious Zionism.[18]
... a political backlash that helped a militantly anti-Arab, far-right Religious Zionist Party to become the third-largest faction ...
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