All Israeli presidents from
Yitzhak Ben-Zvi to
Ezer Weizman were members of, or associated with, the
Labor Party and its predecessors, and all have been considered politically moderate.
Moshe Katsav was the first
Likud president. These tendencies were especially significant in the April 1978 election of Labour's
Yitzhak Navon, following the inability of the governing Likud coalition to elect its candidate to the presidency. Israeli observers believed that, in counterbalance to Prime Minister
Menahem Begin's polarizing leadership, Navon, the country's first president of
Sephardi origin, provided Israel with unifying symbolic leadership at a time of great political controversy and upheaval. In 1983 Navon decided to re-enter Labour politics after five years of nonpartisan service as president, and
Haim Herzog (previously head of military intelligence and
Ambassador of Israel to the United Nations) succeeded him as Israel's sixth president. Likud's
Moshe Katsav's victory over Labour's
Shimon Peres in 2000 (by secret ballot) was an upset.
Albert Einstein, a Jew but not an Israeli citizen, was offered the presidency in 1952 but turned it down. Ehud Olmert was reported to be considering offering the presidency to another non-Israeli
Elie Wiesel, but he was said to be "very not interested".