Jerusalem Report logo small (credit: JPOST STAFF)
Jerusalem Report logo small (credit: JPOST STAFF)
Representing Israel in the UK is not a job for the faint-hearted. Tzipi Hotovely must have suspected as much when she was offered the post of ambassador to Britain by then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in July 2020. Antisemitism was peaking across the Western world, while the domestic policies of Israel’s Likud government – in power for 11 years – were not to the taste of a large segment of the Anglo-Jewish community. No wonder she took a few weeks to think things over before allowing her name to go forward for confirmation by the Cabinet.

Politically, Hotovely is a Likudnik, described as “the ideological voice” of the Likud party. But Israeli politics are full of nuances. Although uncompromising on the issue of Judea and Samaria, Hotovely is very liberal on issues such as women’s rights. In December 2011 she hit the headlines when she insisted on sitting in the front seat of a public bus usually patronized by haredi Orthodox passengers, where women are expected to sit in the rear. Her stance was subsequently endorsed by Israel’s Supreme Court.

She is equally liberal in her views on Zionism and immigration. She welcomes the aliyah of Jews of any degree of Orthodoxy, or none.

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