Knesset Caucus

The Caucus will act to raise and promote awareness in Israel and abroad that the victory of Israel over its enemies means the victory of the Zionist idea and recognition that the State of Israel is the national homeland of the Jewish people. It will also send a clear message about the necessity of a clear military victory over Israel's enemies. This will be achieved to promote a solution to the conflict which will bring real peace, prosperity, progress and a better future to the region as a whole. The Caucus will act in parallel with its sister caucus in the U.S. called the Congressional Israel Victory Caucus

MK Oded Forer
Yisrael Beitenu

Oded Forer enlisted in the Navy, completed naval officers course, and served in a variety of command positions: Dabur (patrol boat) commander, naval officer course instructor, and commander of a-patrol boat subdivision. He was discharged at the rank of captain and was promoted to major during the course of reserve duty. After his discharge from the IDF, Forer began his academic studies and simultaneously began serving as adviser to then-Minister of Education Limor Livnat and as secretary of the Israeli Council for Culture and Arts.

Forer is an attorney, with an LL.B. and a B.A. in Government from the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, and a M.A. in Political Media from Tel Aviv University.

In 2005, Forer founded a strategic consulting firm that focused on ventures, particularly BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer) and PFI (Private Finance Initiative), including a national training center for the Israel Police and the IDF training-base complex (Ir HaBahadim).

In 2011, Forer joined Yisrael Beitenu. He initiated and established the party's youth division –Tzeiri Beitenu – which he headed until 2013. That year, Forer was appointed Director General of the Ministry of Immigration and Absorption, under Minister Sofa Landver.

Prior to the elections for the 20th Knesset, Forer resigned from his position to run for the Knesset. Since September 2015, Forer has been serving as MK.

Activity as Director General of the Ministry of Immigration and Absorption

As Director General of the Ministry of Immigration and Absorption, Forer made, encouraging immigration to Israel as one of the Ministry's main goals, in addition to improving the absorption processes for immigrants. As a result, the name of the Ministry was changed to Ministry of Immigration and Absorption. The Ministry then began to focus on encouraging potential immigrants to emigrate to Israel.

Forer spearheaded a revolution in this area, including the establishment of an inter-ministerial team to encourage immigration from France. He worked to pass Government resolution 1736 to encourage immigration and to promote a national project to encourage immigration. During his term as Director General, the number of immigrants to Israel rose. In 2012, before he joined the Ministry, 1,900 immigrants from France moved to Israel. In 2014, this number rose to over 6,500 immigrants. Furthermore, the number of immigrants who moved to Israel in 2014 broke a ten-year–old record: approximately 27,000 immigrants moved to Israel in 2014, as opposed to the average of 18,000 immigrants in each of the past ten years.

In light of the 2014crisis in Ukraine, which also affected the Jewish community, MK Forer spearheaded a series of measures to facilitate faster and easier absorption for immigrants from the Ukraine. Furthermore, he led to the approval of two significant Government resolutions on the removal of barriers to employment of immigrants. The inter-ministerial committee that Forer initiated and headed that formulated recommendations that were eventually approved by the Government (Government Resolutions 1737 and 2225). The activity resulted in regulatory changes and relief in employment of immigrants and resolved bureaucratic difficulties in the Ministries of Education, Health, and Economy; the Civil Service Commission, Council for Higher Education, and other institutions.

In addition, Forer spearheaded a major consulting process to promote the inclusion of Ethiopian immigrants in Israel, a move to which thousands of people and 12 government ministries were party. Spearheading this complex process required special attention; ultimately, immediately after the formation of the current government, the principles that the committee had painstakingly formulated were approved. This program, known as Derech Hadasha (New Path)for the integration of Ethiopian immigrants in Israeli society, was the first time in which representatives of the Ethiopian community were completely involved in all the hearings and decision-making fora to rebuild trust and formulate a plan that would satisfy the community's needs.

During Forer's term as Director General, thousands of apartments were built for immigrants eligible for public housing alongside steps taken together with the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Housing to increase assistance to immigrants waiting for public housing. During his term, the Ministry began managing and funding the activity of the Israel Students Authority, which handles thousands of students. Furthermore, the Ministry established the new Youth Department.

Activity as a MK

In the 20th Knesset, Oded Forer is a member of the Finance Committee; the Education, Culture and Sports Committee; and the Special Committee to Discuss the Motion for the Agenda on Difficulties in Reforming the Civil Service. Forer chairs the Israel–Slovakia Parliamentary Friendship Group, Israel–Columbia Parliamentary Friendship Group, and the Israel–Serbia Parliamentary Friendship Group.

Oded Forer also chairs the Lobby for the Promotion of Trade in Israel and Overseas, and is member of the the Lobby for Relations between Israel and African Countries, the Lobby for Supervising Protected Tenancy and Protecting the Elderly, the Lobby for Lone Soldiers, the Lobby for Strengthening the Jewish World, the Lobby for the War Against Road Accidents, and the Lobby for the Promotion of the Rights of Druze and Circassians in Israel.

Oded Forer is married and the father of three.

MK Elazar Stern
Yesh Atid

Elazar Stern was born in 1956. Married to Dorit and is the father of five. Resident of Mitzpe Hoshaya.

A Major General (res.) in the IDF, Stern served as Head of the Human Resources Directorate, commander in the IDF Officers School, Chief Education Officer as well as a combatant and commander in the Paratroopers Brigade.

Stern holds a BA in Israel Studies and Economics from Bar-Ilan University, a MA in Business Administration from Tel-Aviv University and a MA in Strategic Resource Management from the National Defense University in Washington D.C.

In the 19th Knesset, Stern served for the Hatnua Party headed by Tzipi Livni. He was member of the Constitution, Law and Justice Committee and the Finance Committee. His parliamentary activity focused on religion and state, and the Jewish-Democratic discourse in the Israeli Knesset. He proposed the Conversion Law (Temporary Order) 5774-2014, the Shabbat and Israel Holidays Law 5774-2014, and the Authorization to Provide Supervision and Regulation over Kashrut Services Law 5774-2014. Stern chaired the Lobby of Religion and State, the Lobby for Ethiopian Immigrant Soldiers and the Parliamentary Lobby for Holocaust Survivors, in which he fought to increase resources provided to Holocaust survivors in Israel.

MK Avraham Neguise
Likud

Avraham Neguise was born in 5718, 1958, and immigrated to Israel from Gondar, Ethiopia in 1985. He holds a Ph.D. in Education from Sussex University in England, a BA and MA in Social Work from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, a MA in Initiatives and Renewal from Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne Australia, and a LLB from the Sha'arei Mishpat Academic Center. He is a social worker and jurist by trade, and served as Director General of 'South Wing to Zion' - an association promoting the immigration and absorption of Ethiopian Jews.

Neguise was elected to the 20th Knesset on behalf of Likud. He chairs the Committee for Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs, and is a member of the House Committee, State Control Committee, the Labor, Welfare and Health Committee, the Subcommittee on the Status of the Elderly and the Subcommittee to Care for Homeless Youngsters.