New LGBT political party to be founded

“A lot of parties like saying they promote gay rights, but we can better run our struggles by ourselves...straight people can’t really represent us. It’s time to have our own representatives."

Jerusalem Gay Pride Parade 2017 (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)
Jerusalem Gay Pride Parade 2017
(photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)
The founding meeting of a new party solely dedicated to serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual community will be held Tuesday in Tel Aviv.
The party is being founded by Imri Kalmann, who is the chief executive officer of a marketing company and is a former chairman of the Aguda, the Israeli LGBT Task Force. Kalmann was active in Meretz and even briefly ran for a position as its leader, but said he realized that the only way to truly help the LGBT community was to form a new party.
“We have had gay caucuses and lobbying in the Knesset, but they have not been proven effective,” Kalmann said. “We have also had gay MKs in Meretz, the Zionist Union, and Likud, but that was not effective either, because their obligations are to their party more than to our community. We need a party that puts its focus on creating change and advancing our interests in Israeli politics.”
Kalmann complained that while many parties send MKs to gay pride rallies and fly the colorful flag of the LGBT community, it is much more rare for those parties to hire gay staff members. He himself applied for a job in Meretz and did not receive it.
“A lot of parties like saying they promote gay rights, but we can better run our struggles by ourselves,” he said. “Straight people can’t really represent us. It’s time to have our own representatives. We are an organized community, and the way we accomplished so much so far has been to work for ourselves.”
Kalmann said he was not overly concerned about passing the 3.25% electoral threshold. He said the Tel Aviv gay pride parade attracts some 250,000 people every year, which he said makes it Israel’s second largest annual event in one place after the Lag Ba’omer festivities on Mount Meron.
“That proves a lot of people see it as an important issue and part of their values and all that is missing is their right to vote for it,” he said.
Kalmann has already decided that he will not head the party. He would prefer to attract well-known LGBT figures to run on the party’s list.
Gili Mosinzon, a bisexual basketball player, has already expressed interest. Kalmann would also be interested in gay Zionist Union MK Itzik Shmuli and former Peace Now head Avi Buskila. He said the party would field a balance of gay, lesbian, and trans-gender candidates.
Besides Shmuli, the only current MK who is openly gay is Amir Ohana (Likud). There are many gay candidates running for the next Knesset including Shmuli, Ohana, religious lesbian activist Zehorit Sorek (Yesh Atid), former haredi lesbian Heidi Moses (Likud) and Buskila (Meretz).