Haifa: Israel’s Palestinian political parties are banding together under one ticket for the first time ever ahead of national elections in March, hoping to boost turnout and help unseat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The result is an awkward political marriage of communists, Palestinian nationalists, religious Muslims, feminists and even one Jew. But Arab politicians say it will improve chronically low Palestinian voter turnout and help block Netanyahu from forming the next government.

“We will be a central player in politics like never before,” said Ayman Odeh, a first-time parliamentary candidate and the leader of the combined Arab list.

The four parties agreed to unify last week because of a new law passed last year that raised the percentage of votes that a party must win to land a seat in parliament from 2 to 3.25 per cent — a law advanced by Israel’s ultranationalist foreign minister that indigenous Palestinian lawmakers believe was intended to reduce Arab representation in parliament.

Palestinian politicians in the Israeli regime say they have come under mounting pressure from their constituents to cooperate in order to tackle the challenges facing their community, including what many see as increased hostility from the Israeli public and Israeli leaders — particularly since the summer war in Gaza.

“People said to us, ‘Your answer should be unity,’” said Masoud Ganaim, the number two on the list and a representative of an Islamic movement.

The unified list is campaigning on promises to prevent Netanyahu from winning again by serving as an opposition bloc that would complicate his coalition-building efforts and help give rise to a centre-left government headed by Labor Party leader Isaac Herzog and former peace negotiator Tzipi Livni.

Palestinian of 1948 areas make up about a fifth of the Israel’s population of some 8 million, but their participation in the regime’s politics has long been a complicated matter.

Though they have full citizenship in the regime, indigenous Palestinian citizens say they have suffered from decades of discrimination, with unemployment and poverty often higher than the national average in their communities.

They also identify with the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza, leading many of the regime’s Jewish citizens to view them with mistrust. Israel’s Palestinian citizen population mainly consists of Palestinian families who were not expelled or forced to leave Palestine when the invading Zionist forces established the Israeli regime in 1948.

Palestinian citizen politicians seem to manifest a split identity. They champion Palestinian rights and have long had ties with politicians in the Palestinian territories, but they often speak eloquent Hebrew and are firm believers in participating in the regime’s politics.

At Odeh’s home in the mixed Jewish-Palestinian city of Haifa, he displayed both a trophy of appreciation from the Palestinian Fatah faction as well as leading Hebrew novelist Amos Oz’s autobiographical novel. Ganaim, the Islamist representative, has a book penned by Netanyahu on his office bookshelf.

Still, many Palestinian citizens have felt disenfranchised, and previous elections have seen low Arab turnout, with many boycotting the process.

But the union could change that. A recent poll conducted on behalf of the Abraham Fund, which promotes Arab-Jewish equality in Israel, suggests that the unified list would boost Arab turnout to 56 per cent — 10 percentage points higher than the last election in 2013. The poll questioned 514 Palestinian citizens and had a margin of error of 4.5 per cent. By comparison, Jewish voter turnout in 2013 was nearly 68 per cent.

With that anticipated surge in votes, Palestinian citizen politicians estimate that their joint list could garner up to 15 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, large enough to help block a hard-line coalition headed by Netanyahu and paving the way for his challengers to form a government.

Palestinian parties traditionally do not join coalitions, saying they do not want to bear responsibility for the regime’s policies in the West Bank and Gaza, but Palestinian politicians say they would serve as a “security net” by voting with a less radical government even while sitting in the opposition.

The four parties involved in the unified list collectively hold 11 seats in the current parliament. In a poll aired Monday on Channel 2 TV, the union garnered 12 seats, making it parliament’s fourth largest list. The poll had a margin of error of 4.5 per cent and surveyed 575 people.

Beyond its potential political might, the union is promising Palestinian voters a shift in priorities.

Odeh, the fresh-faced 40-year-old head of the joint list, said he wants to strengthen efforts to address the domestic concerns of Palestinians in Israel alongside veteran Arab lawmakers’ longtime focus on the rights of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Odeh hopes to land a leading position on parliament’s internal affairs committee, giving his list the power to increase budgets to Palestinian towns that lag behind in development compared to the country’s predominantly Jewish towns.

But the united parties, which have yet to choose a name, face hurdles in convincing voters that their varied interests can be fairly represented under one banner.

Osama Masri, 55, an actor, said he would vote for the unified Arab list, but begrudgingly so. He said that as an atheist, he is uncomfortable voting for a party that includes Islamists. Palestinians in Israel do not all share the same ideology, he said.

“We’re not a matchbox, with the red part of the matches all lined up in the same direction,” Masri said.