A new modern Haredi party could provide the last few seats for the opposition to form a government and topple Netanyahu's hard-right ruleYehuda Moses 10:04 PM • July 10 2026 IDTAround the time Israel was established, about half of the ultra-Orthodox Agudat Yisrael party consisted of moderate Haredim, workers represented by the Poalei Agudat Yisrael movement, while the other half were fervently ultra-Orthodox – fervently Haredi. Later, the two sides ran on separate slates. Loading...Click the alert icon to follow topics:Ultra-OrthodoxHaredim Israeli electionsUnited Torah JudaismIsraeli politicsCommentsLoading...In the NewsIn the News: Israel NewsU.S.-IranTrumpWest BankHussam Abu SafiyaAndy BurnhamIsrael ProtestsHaQuizHaaretz PodcastThe Israeli Election's Sleeper Story: The Revival of the Modern ultra-OrthodoxIsrael's Children Must Stop Feeding Netanyahu's War MachineGerman Parliament Backs Bill That Criminalizes Denial of Israel's Right to ExistBrad Lander Hosts Ayman Odeh to Discuss a Shared Israeli-Palestinian FuturePoll: Half of Jewish Americans Don't Think Protesting Israel Is AntisemiticRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIThe 'Special Relationship' Is Gone, and Israel Isn't Ready for What's ComingDumber Than a 10-year-old: Are Israeli Students Really That Stupid?As Israel Lacks Hundreds of Patrol Officers, West Bank Staff DoublesAn Israeli Principal Desegregated a Tel Aviv School. Here's What HappenedThe Original Tradwives of Ancient RomeMade in Kurdistan, Smuggled via Jordan: The Mysterious Firearms Flooding Israel