Ehud Olmert

(1945- )
Ehud Olmert was born in Binyamina
in 1945.
He served in the IDF
as combat infantry unit officer and was a military correspondent
for the IDF journal Bamachane. A lawyer by profession,
he holds B.A. and LL.B. degrees in Psychology, Philosophy
and Law from the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem.
Ehud Olmert was a Knesset
Member from 1973, serving on the House, Constitution,
Law & Justice Committee, State Control, Foreign
Affairs && Defense, Finance, Education &
Culture, and Internal Affairs & Environment Committees.
From 1988-1990 he served as Minister
Without Portfolio responsible for minority affairs,
and from 1990 until 1992 as Minister
of Health.
In November 1993, Olmert was elected
Mayor of Jerusalem,
subsequently resigning from the Knesset in 1998. After
his re-election to the Knesset in 2003, he resigned
from his position in February 2003.
In February 2003, Ehud
Olmert was appointed Minister
of Industry and Trade, and Deputy Prime
Minister. Olmert became an influential member
of the Cabinet and was one of the first
to advocate a withdrawal from Gaza, an idea
that was ultimately was endorsed by
Prime Minister
Sharon and
became the disengagement
plan.
Following Ariel
Sharon's decision to leave the Likud
Party in November 2005, Olmert joined
with Sharon and several other former Likud
ministers to form the new centrist party, Kadima.
On January 4, 2006, Sharon
suffered a massive stroke that left him
unable to perform his dutires as prime minister.
On January 5, Olmert was given acting prime
ministerial duties to keep the government
effectively running in Sharon's absence.
Also on January 5, Olmert held his first
cabinet meeting to signal the transfer of
power. Olmert will remain acting Prime Minister
until the Israeli elections, which are scheduled
to take place on March 28, 2006.
Sources: Israeli
Ministry of Foreign Affairs; News reports
(January 2006) |