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Cooperation and Development

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Cooperation and Development (Template:Lang-he, Shituf VePituah) was a short-lived political party in Israel.

History

Cooperation and Development was established on 5 July 1966 during the sixth Knesset, when two of the three Israeli Arab parties, Cooperation and Brotherhood and Progress and Development, merged.[1] Both parties had had two seats, meaning the new union had four, which were taken by Seif-El-Din El-Zubi, Jabr Moade, Elias Nahale and Diyab Ovid.

Both parties had been part of Levi Eshkol's coalition government, as they were associated with the Alignment, and the new party assumed their place as a coalition member.

However, on 1 January 1967, the party split into the original factions. Later during the Knesset session both parties split again, as Jabr Moade broke away from Cooperation and Brotherhood to form the Druze Party, whilst Elias Nahale broke away from Progress and Development to form the Jewish-Arab Brotherhood. However, by the 1969 elections, Moade had joined Progress and Development, whilst Nahale had become a member of Cooperation and Brotherhood, the two effectively swapping parties.

References