“It’s time to choose: A messianic Jerusalem or an Israeli Jerusalem?”
Results are not expected the night or even the morning after the elections but rather a few days later – and at the latest on Sunday, March 3.
In the haredi sector, there four lists competing against each other for seats on the Jerusalem city council.
Jerusalemite of the Week: The head of public lighting and power infrastructure for the Jerusalem Municipality, Michael Lidsky is tasked with lighting up the biggest city in Israel.
ELECTION DIARY: “Israeli or ultra-Orthodox Jerusalem.” Perhaps not the best choice of words these days, when the majority of Israelis are looking for unity, the catchphrase has sparked a small flame.
AT THE TABLE with Yehuda Ben-Yosef, an Israeli-Kurd community leader and municipal election candidate who wants Kurdistan to be Israel's next Azerbaijan.
Just as in Gaza, they study from textbooks full of hatred and incitement against the State of Israel in general and against Jews in particular.
For religious Jerusalemites who generally define themselves as National Religious, there are three representative lists running for city council in the elections set for the end of this month
A few meetings are being held among supporters, a visual campaign is starting to flood the streets of Jerusalem. A certain awakening is taking place.