Histadrut mulls extending strike

The scene in the baggage hall at Ben Gurion Airport, September 2, 2024  credit: Histadrut spokesperson
The scene in the baggage hall at Ben Gurion Airport, September 2, 2024 credit: Histadrut spokesperson

The general strike in support of the families of Israeli hostages in the Gaza Strip may continue for another day, unless the courts intervene.

Histadrut (General Federation of Labor in Israel) chairperson Arnon Bar-David declared a general strike in Israel today following the murder by Hamas of six Israeli hostages it had held since October 7 last year: Carmel Gat, Eden Yerushalmi, Hersh Goldberg-Polin (a US citizen), Alexander Lubanov, Almog Seroussi, and Ori Danino.

The strike, which is intended to back calls for a deal with Hamas to free the remaining hostages, began at 6:00 am this morning, and covers public institutions and many local authorities, but vital services continue to operate as normal.

The Histadrut is considering whether to continue with the strike tomorrow, although, on the possibility that the court might intervene following a petition by the state, a spokesperson for the Histadrut said, "If injunctions are issued, we’ll respect them." As for the fact that the strike has not taken hold everywhere it has been declared, the spokesperson said, "A strike is a process, there’s no such thing as 100%, but there is certainly an extensive work stoppage in most services in the country."

In the public sector, most of which is organized under the Histadrut, the strike is widespread. This includes government services relating directly to citizens, such as the Employment Service, the National Insurance Institute, the water corporations, and government ministries.

Among local authorities, Tel Aviv, Haifa, Givatayim, and Kfar Sava have announced that they will join the strike. The Federation of Local Authorities in Israel is also on strike, but this does not oblige all local authorities to follow suit.

In Jerusalem and in many other local authorities associated with the political right, schools and kindergartens are operating normally.

Bus companies Egged, Dan, Metropolin are striking, as is the Gush Dan light rail. Israel Railways has been exempted from the strike. The light rail in Jerusalem and the Carmelit in Haifa are on strike or are experiencing disruptions,

The Israel Airports Authority announced yesterday that Ben Gurion Airport would be disrupted between 8:00 am and 10:00 am only, and that landings would proceed as normal, but the Histadrut has not given a time when the disruptions will end. The head of the Transport and Ports Union in the Histadrut Adv. Eyal Yadin said that the strike applied to all departures, apart from flights exempted by an exemptions committee, but that arrivals would not be affected. Meanwhile, it is reported from Ben Gurion Airport that there is considerable crowding and that the baggage conveyor belts have stopped working.

Hospitals are working on a Saturday format, except for emergency services. Magen David Adom is working as usual. Maccabi, Clalit and Meuhedet health services are working normally. The banks are on complete strike. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange is working normally.

Many private sector business organizations have announced that they will join the strike. The Israel Business Forum, which brings together 200 senior managers from some of Israel’s largest businesses, has announced that it members will shut down today. Fox owner Harel Wiesel, who spoke at a meeting of the Forum, said, "The time has come to step up a level and give support to the families of the hostages."

Tens of thousands of people took part in demonstrations around Israel overnight in support of the hostages and their families and calling on the government to reach a deal for the hostages' release. 

Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on September 2, 2024.

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2024.

The scene in the baggage hall at Ben Gurion Airport, September 2, 2024  credit: Histadrut spokesperson
The scene in the baggage hall at Ben Gurion Airport, September 2, 2024 credit: Histadrut spokesperson
Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Shlomi Yosef Israel formulates measures to cut planned US tariff

Two delegations will fly to Washington for talks on the matter with proposals including cutting bureaucracy for US imports.

Ashkelon vacation home fetches unexpectedly high price

US buyers paid NIS 4.37 million for the 20th floor apartment overlooking the marina.

Igal Zamir credit: TAT Technologies Buoyant TAT Technologies "no longer under investors' radar"

The Israeli aerospace company's share price has risen 27.9% since the start of 2025.

Israeli apartments Credit: Shutterstock Apartments sold and rented

A selection of recent real estate deals in Israel in Jerusalem, Beit Shemesh, Tel Aviv, Ness Ziona, Nahariya, and Netivot.

Zutacore cofounder and CEO Erez Freibach credit: Gal Bref, Moshe Filberg and Zutacore PR SoftBank teams with Israeli chip liquid cooling startup ZutaCore

The Sderot-based company has developed an innovative cooling technology that dramatically cuts energy costs for data centers.

Hearst Tower New York credit: Shutterstock Hearst Ventures shuts down Israel office

The closure is part of a global move to shut down offices outside the US, but the fund will continue investment in Israeli companies.

US President Donald Trump credit: Shutterstock US reciprocal procurement demands put Israel in a bind

Reciprocal procurement on major tenders injects billions of dollars into Israel every year and supports hundreds of local companies but Israel may need to relax them in exchange for US tariff cuts.

Israeli stocks on Wall Street credit Nasdaq, Raanan Tal, Itay Tagar, Space Cut design: Tali Bogdanovsky Despite turmoil, analysts bullish on Israel Wall Street stocks

After recent strong declines, analysts are tipping Israeli tech stocks, with relative immunity to recession and limited exposure to tariffs.

Intel's 2025 vision credit: Intel Will Intel's sell-off include Israeli assets?

After the sale of Altera, "Globes" considers whether the troubled chipmaker will sell Mobileye or its Kiryat Gat fab.

CloudShare management team credit: PR Bow River Capital buys Israeli co CloudShare

The Denver-based alternative asset manager is paying an estimated $60-80 million for the SaaS provider of AI guided solutions for complex technical training requirements.

Housing prices continue to rise   credit: Tali Bogdanovsky Israel's housing price rise riddle

Despite a huge inventory of unsold new homes in central Israel and weak sales, apartment prices are still rising. "Globes" analyzes the data.

Inflation  credit: Tali Bogdanovsky March CPI higher than expected, housing prices rise

The March reading brings annual inflation in Israel down to 3.3% from 3.4% at the end of February.

Ben Gurion airport credit: Tali Bogdanovsky Abundance of affordable last minute Passover flight deals

The return of foreign airlines to Israel has brought down fares dramatically even for last minute vacations.

Karish rig  credit: Eyal Izhar Kesem Energy signs gas deals worth $2.8b

The power plant, scheduled to begin operating in 2029, will buy gas worth $2 billion from Energean and a further $700-800 million from the Tamar partners.

Kosher for Passover Coca Cola bottles credit: social media Why are yellow cap Coca Cola bottles different from all others?

Nostalgic Coca Cola aficionados claim that the kosher for Passover version, made from sugar cane instead of high fructose corn syrup, is the genuine taste of the soft drink.

Avigdor Willenz credit: Intel Exclusive: Avigdor Willenz's Element Labs raises $50m

The Israeli startup is developing AI processors for inference, the stage in which AI models are activated after they have already been trained.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018