Gideon Sa'ar

Politician

Birthday December 9, 1966

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Tel Aviv, Israel

Age 57 years old

Nationality Israel

#36932 Most Popular

1966

Gideon Moshe Sa'ar (גִּדְעוֹן סַעַר; born 9 December 1966) is an Israeli politician who served as Minister of Justice between 2021 and 2022.

1995

Sa'ar worked as an aide to the Attorney General between 1995 and 1997, and then as an aide to the State Attorney until 1998.

1999

Sa'ar was appointed cabinet Secretary in 1999 and again from 2001–2 after Likud's Ariel Sharon won a special election for Prime Minister.

2003

Sa'ar was previously a member of the Knesset for the Likud between 2003 and 2014, Deputy Prime Minister for a brief spell in 2021, as well as holding the posts of Education Minister (2009–2013) and Minister of the Interior (2013–2014).

In the 2003 elections he won a seat in the Knesset on Likud's list, and was appointed Likud Parliamentary Group Chairman as well as Chairman of the Coalition.

He was opposed to Israel's unilateral disengagement plan, and attempted to pass a bill demanding a referendum on the subject.

2006

After retaining his seat in the 2006 elections he was reappointed Group Chairman and also became a deputy Knesset speaker.

While in the Knesset, Sa'ar proposed bills to jail employers who fire pregnant women, (he chaired the Knesset Committee on the Status of Women) and to ban cosmetics testing on animals.

2008

In December 2008 Sa'ar won the Likud primaries for its list going into the 2009 elections, giving him second place on the Likud list after leader Binyamin Netanyahu.

He retained his seat, and was appointed Minister of Education on 31 March.

2012

In 2012, he again gained the most votes in Likud primaries, and entered the 19th Knesset.

2013

In May 2013, Sa'ar married Israeli news anchor Geula Even, with whom he has two children, David and Shira.

Geula was born to Lithuanian-Jewish immigrants from the Soviet Union.

Sa'ar has another two children, Alona and Daniela, from his first wife Shelly, as well as one grandchild.

2014

In September 2014, Sa'ar announced that he would be resigning his post before the next election; with rumors of an alleged sexual harassments background for his sudden quit.

He said he would still remain a member of the Likud.

On 17 September, he took a hiatus from politics.

He left the Knesset on 5 November, and was replaced by Leon Litinetsky.

2017

On 3 April 2017 Sa'ar announced his return to politics and intention to run in the next Likud primaries.

He was seen as a potential candidate for party leadership and eventually prime minister.

In September 2017, The Jerusalem Post ranked him 5th on its "50 most influential Jews" list, calling him the "heir apparent to the Likud throne".

2018

In September 2018, he was ranked 25th along with fellow Likud members Yisrael Katz and Gilad Erdan.

2019

In 2019 Sa'ar returned to the Knesset and unsuccessfully ran against longtime leader Benjamin Netanyahu for the leadership of the Likud; he left the Knesset the following year after establishing a new party called New Hope.

Gideon Moshe Serchensky (later Sa'ar) was born in Tel Aviv.

His mother Bruriah is a Mizrahi-Bukharan Jew who is the 7th generation of her family in Israel.

His father Shmuel is an Ashkenazi Jew who was born in Ukraine and moved to Argentina as a child before immigrating to Israel.

He has two siblings, a brother and a sister.

His father was a doctor.

Sa'ar grew up primarily in Tel Aviv, but as a child, he lived for a number of years in Mitzpe Ramon, where his father worked as a pediatrician, and in kibbutz Sde Boker, where he was the kibbutz doctor.

At the time, Sde Boker was the residence of Israel's founding Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion.

His father was frequently in contact with Ben-Gurion as the kibbutz doctor, and the young Gideon Sa'ar met Ben-Gurion numerous times when accompanying his father on visits to his home, during which Ben-Gurion gave him geography quizzes.

After serving in the Israel Defense Forces as an intelligence NCO in the Golani Brigade, Sa'ar studied political science at Tel Aviv University and then went on to study law at the same institution.

In October 2019, amid coalition talks, Prime Minister Netanyahu indicated he was considering holding a snap election for party leadership.

In a terse tweet, Sa'ar responded "I'm ready."

2020

In December 2020, Sa'ar announced that he would leave Likud and will form his own party, called New Hope.

He submitted his Knesset resignation on 9 December, which went into effect on 11 December.

The party contested the 2021 Israeli legislative election, with the intent of forming a governing coalition, and removing Netanyahu from office.

He regained his seat in the Knesset, as New Hope gained six seats at the elections.

In June 2021, Sa'ar became Minister of Justice in the thirty-sixth government of Israel.

On 12 October 2023, Sa'ar was sworn in as a minister without portfolio in the Thirty-seventh government of Israel following the outbreak of the 2023 Israel–Hamas war.