Palestinian PM exit exposes rift

PRIME Minister Rami Hamdallah remarked when he was sworn in to succeed Salam Fayad at the helm of the Palestinian government earlier this month that his government’s life will by necessity be short- lived. It was intended to last until August, at which time it would be dissolved in order to pave the way for a long-awaited national consensus government consisting of both Fatah and Hamas loyalists. Doubtless, not even Hamdallah expected his tenure to last a mere 18-days.
Following intense back-and-forth between the recently appointed prime minister and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Hamdallah last Sunday became the second “caretaker prime minister” in a month, when his resignation — submitted on Thursday — was accepted by Abbas. Meanwhile, a power struggle is playing out in the Palestinian Authority.
“The classic power struggle between the president and the prime minister came between the prime minister and his (president-appointed) deputies,” according to writer and political analyst Jihad Harb. He said that, “The presidency is trying to concentrate all executive powers and keep them in the hands of the Palestinian Authority practically, but not legally.”
Palestinian media was rife with reports of the alleged dispute between Hamdallah and his deputies that lead him to resignation. A journalist who did not want to be named said that President Abbas gave Mohammed Mustafa, whom he appointed as the economic deputy to the prime minister, verbal approval to sign agreements with the World Bank without first referring them to the prime minister.
Muhammed Abu Khdeir, a senior journalist with Al-Quds, a leading Palestinian newspaper, opined that Hamdallah quit because he was “like a picture with no power.” He described Hamdallah as being “upset,” and not wanting to speak to anyone. Abu Khdeir said Hamdallah left Ramallah for Nablus, where he has been serving as the president of Al-Najah University.
Masri blames the problem on the absence of a Parliament and a viable system of accountability. “Anyone in the position of the prime minister will do the same thing. All prime ministers need authority and powers to function. Hamdallah is an academic with minimal experience, so it took him some time to understand the problem,” Masri said.
Al-Quds journalist Abu Khdeir said that Hamas is under pressure from Fatah because they want to lead the government. During the last five years, Prime Minister Fayad replaced Fatah members with people on the political left like Foreign Minister Riyad Malki his chief aide Jamal Zakout. Senior Fatah members feel that Fayad worked against both Fatah and Hamas.
A consensus of three possible scenarios has emerged among observers in the Palestinian Authority, first among them that Abbas himself will lead a unity government that will prepare for national elections. But this is not seen as a priority for either Fatah or Hamas. Such a government failed to take shape despite being agreed upon in the 2012 Doha agreement.
The second scenario sees Abbas appointing PIF head Mohammed Mustafa, a close aide to Abbas, and the candidate the president failed to appoint the first time around. Sources inside the Palestinian Authority speaking off the record said that the primary reason Mustafa was passed over is because the United States Administration didn’t welcome his candidacy, fearing the Fatah-Hamas split might actually be ended.
Political analyst Harb agreed, telling that, “I believe the Americans rejected Mustafa’s name as well as all other candidates because they didn’t want the reconciliation to be achieved.”
The third option is that Abbas will push for a Fatah-majority government led by a senior Fatah member. “There has to be cohesion and harmony between the president and the prime minister. A Fatah member will be less confrontational with President Abbas,” according to Harb.
Abu Khdeir of Al-Quds sees a fourth possibility in Dr. Mohammad Shtayyeh, a seasoned official who heads the Palestinian Economic Council for Development & Reconstruction (PECDAR). Abu Khdeir’s option recalls the importance Western nations placed in Salam Fayad’s impeccable bona fides within the international financial community. Abu Khdeir suggests that while Shtayyeh could possibly take the prime minister’s portfolio, but if not, Abbas could opt to retain it for himself if it is not determined to be illegal for him to do so.
The final scenario suggests that Abbas, too, does not want elections because Fatah is weak and either Hamas, as they did in 2006; or Islamists, could walk away with the electoral victory.
n This article was written for The Media Line.