Smotrich rebranded his party from National Union-Tkuma to the Religious Zionist Party on 7 January 2021.[11] The following month, RZP, Otzma Yehudit, and Noam formed an electoral alliance,[12] with all three parties winning six seats in the 2021 election on a joint list.[13] The three parties ran together again in the 2022 election, with the RZP winning seven seats, Otzma Yehudit winning six seats, and Noam keeping its single seat.[14]
Hagit Moshe was elected head of The Jewish Home on 19 January 2021 by the parties Central Committee, replacing former head Rafi Peretz.[15] After failed negotiations with the RZP for the 2021 election, Moshe announced that the party would not run in the election, and instead supported Yamina[16] and allowed them to use "ב", the traditional symbol of Mafdal and The Jewish Home.[17] Shaked ended the brief alliance she had with Yoaz Hendel (called Zionist Spirit) prior to the 2022 election,[18] reportedly over Hendel's unwillingness to serve alongside Benjamin Netanyahu in government,[19] and instead headed the Yamina slate[20] that ran under The Jewish Home name in the 2022 election.[21] The Jewish Home did not clear the electoral threshold, and was left out of the Knesset.[22]
There were ongoing talks between Moshe and Smotrich going back as far as May 2023 discussing a joint run.[23] In August 2023 the parties announced that they were to unite under the name The National Religious Party — Religious Zionism, with Smotrich serving as the head of the united party.[24] The Jewish Home central committee voted to dissolve the party on 20 August 2023.[25]
Ideology
The National-Religious Party supports strengthening Israel's Jewish religious identity, and is opposed to any territorial concessions. The party advocates for "traditional family values", and opposes legalizing same-sex marriage. It also supports increased funding for Torah study and religious education.[citation needed]
Local elections
Moshe, the former head of The Jewish Home, led the party's Jerusalem list ahead of the 2024 Israeli municipal elections.[26] The election was originally set to take place on 30 October 2023, but on 23 October, the Knesset pushed back the date until 30 January 2024, as a result of the Israel–Hamas war.[27] The election was pushed back again on 31 December to 27 February.[28] The party won two seats in the election.[29]