Israel's Livni is a tough contender
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Tzipi Livni might just be able to frown her way to power in Israel.
Dubbed "Mrs Clean" by one Israeli newspaper columnist, the usually dour foreign minister is widely seen as the antithesis of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, a glad-handing veteran politician embroiled in a corruption scandal forcing him from office.
Political analysts have described Livni's publicly glum demeanour as a welcome contrast to Olmert, an asset in her race to succeed him in a Kadima party leadership vote on September 17.
Even a recent incident, famously captured on Israeli television, in which she snapped at two children bringing her sweet cakes during a campaign stop, appears to have done little to sour public opinion against her.
"Please stop. It's disturbing me," scolded Livni, a 50-year-old mother of two, as she paused for a moment in her survey of security issues. The youngsters scurried away.
Livni came to politics just over a decade ago, following a stint in the Mossad intelligence service -- as a legal adviser, some say, while others speculate that she helped hunt Arab enemies abroad -- and then a career as a corporate attorney.
In 2006, she became Israel's second woman foreign minister. The first was Golda Meir who later served as prime minister from 1969 to 1974.
Livni's private life has remained out of the headlines. Few Israelis can name her husband, businessman Naftali Spitzer. Continued...




