Senior members of
Labour, with 19 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, is the main partner in Ehud Olmert's 67-member coalition. Its departure could bring down the government.
On Monday, Olmert's shaky six-month-old government was bolstered after he reached an agreement with Avigdor Lieberman, the leader of Yisrael Beitenu party, on joining the coalition.
The agreement is expected to be brought for a cabinet vote on Wednesday and to the full Knesset within a week.
Under the agreement, Lieberman will be appointed minister for strategic affairs - a new portfolio, focusing on relations with
Most of Lieberman's views - which include the transfer of populations to create homogeneous Jewish and Palestinian states - are anathema to Labour, the main liberal party in
Coalition
Ophir Pines-Paz, the culture minister criticized the agreement and called for Labor to resign from cabinet if it goes through.
"The actual appointment of Lieberman as minister for strategic affairs could constitute a strategic threat to
"Labor party must not give a hand to this move. I will do everything in order for Labor not to be a member of such a coalition. I will try to convince MPs to oppose the move in parliament.
"There is no common ground for sitting with Lieberman in a coalition. Not in the political-diplomatic, the economic or the governance and democracy fields," he said.
Labor MP and former chief of
"This is a shallow joke to allow Lieberman to become minister for strategic affairs," he said.
Photo Caption
Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister