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Kadima
Ynetnews Chairwoman: Tzipi Livni
Kadima was formed in November of 2005 by Former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, following his resignation from the Likud.
In April 2004, then Prime Minister Sharon started pushing the idea of a unilateral disengagement from the Gaza Strip. The move called for the removal of 21 Israeli settlements in the Strip and four settlements in the northern West Bank, and sparked controversy from the moment of its inception, provoking political outbursts and mass public objection.
In early June, Sharon's government approved the disengagement plan and in August 2005 the Gaza pullout began. In its aftermath, Sharon's position in the Likud suffered, as he began encountering more and more opposition within his party, and on November 21 2005, he announced he was leaving the Likud and forming a new party which would allow him the freedom to carry out his new political vision.
Israeli politics were shaken by the move, as Sharon's new party was soon joined by political figures from all ends of the spectrum: Ehud Olmert, Tzipi Livni, Meir Sheetrit, Gideon Ezra, Avraham Hirchson, Ronnie Bar-On, Haim Ramon and Shimon Peres, to name a few, rallied to Sharon's side, giving Kadima more than 150 members in its first day of founding alone.
PM Sharon suffered a massive stroke in the beginning of January 2006 and has been in a coma ever since. Ehud Olmert replaced him as leader of the party. Olmert stepped down as Kadima chairman in September of 2008, amid political scandal. His Foreign Minister, Tzipi Livni, was voted party chairwoman in the subsequent primaries.
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