The British Mandate Authority had estimated in …

Years: 1948 - 1948
May

The British Mandate Authority had estimated in 1939 that about four hundred and forty-five thousand out of one-and-a-half million residents of the Mandate were Jews.

Israeli officials estimate that as of May 15, 1948, about six hundred and fifty thousand Jews live in the area scheduled to become Israel under the November 1947 UN partition proposal.

Ben-Gurion announces the formation of a Provisional Council of State, actually a transformed executive committee of the Jewish Agency with himself as prime minister.

Chaim Weizmann becomes president of the council, although Ben-Gurion is careful to make the presidency a distinctly ceremonial position.

The provisional government will hold elections no later than October 1948 for the Constituent Assembly to draw up a formal constitution.

The first legislative act of the Provisional Council of State is the Law and Administrative Ordinance of 1948 that declares null and void the restrictions on Jewish immigration imposed by British authorities.

Moshe Sharett, who in 1947 had successfully campaigned for the United Nations to adopt the Palestinian partition plan, is made the country's first foreign minister.

Shimon Peres, who had immigrated with his family to Palestine in 1934, in 1947 had joined the Haganah under the direction of Ben-Gurion, who soon became his political mentor and, in 1948, appoints the twenty-four-year-old Peres head of Israel's navy.

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