Big Decisions Loom As Knesset Begins Winter Session

October 15, 2013

3 min read

Knesset

And the LORD said unto Moses: ‘Gather unto Me seventy men of the elders of Israel, whom thou knowest to be the elders of the people, and officers over them; and bring them unto the tent of meeting, that they may stand there with thee (Numbers 11:16)

Knesset
View of the plenum hall of the Israeli parliament during the opening session on October 14, 2013. (Photo: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

The new Knesset session kicked off Monday with a large agenda packed with controversial issues looming, according to The Times of Israel. The winter session commenced with speeches on possible intervention with Iran and the chances of peace with the Palestinian Authority.

President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and opposition leader Shelly Yachimovich focused most of their Monday speeches on the diplomatic agenda.

Many believe this will be one of the more dramatic Knesset sessions in recent history with a number of domestic issues set to ignite ferocious debate within and without the parliament walls. The key issues on the Knesset’s domestic agenda could see the ulta-Orthodox public enraged, send Arab lawmakers packing, ease the housing shortages that sent hundreds of thousands of Israelis into the streets in 2011, and, unthinkably, choose Peres’ successor.

n November, the Knesset is set to vote into law the so-called Better Governance Bill, a collection of reforms to the rules for electing and running the government proposed by Yesh Atid and Yisrael Beytenu. The most dramatic of the bill’s stipulations: doubling the electoral threshold — the number of votes a party must win to be eligible to receive Knesset seats — from two percent to four. That figure may well erase any chance of election for Israel’s far-right and far-left parties, who will have to merge with larger, more centrist blocs if they wish to participate in political life at the national level.

In another upcoming slug-fest, a possible raising of the mandate threshold to be included in the government could have all three Arab parties, the communist Hadash, nationalist Balad and Islamist Ra’am-Ta’al, on the outside of the Knesset looking in. At the end of the last session, Arab MKs staged a protest in the Knesset plenum in which they used their allotted speaking time during the Knesset debate to stand silently at the podium. “You want a Knesset without Arabs,” one railed at coalition MKs.

Proponents of the threshold increase, which was originally proposed by the Labor Party, argue that far from diminishing Arab representation, it would force the narrow ideological parties based in the Arab sector to pursue broader agendas and alliances in order to attract larger audiences. The result would be a political system that favors compromise and unity rather than the current one, which encourages political differentiation and extremism.

The bill has a majority in the Knesset and so looks set to pass into law by next month, though an effort is underway, led by Hatnua party MKs, to make the threshold increase gradual, raising it to 3% during the next Knesset elections and 4% in the one thereafter.
The next four months will also prove vital with regard to the current peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Labor has vowed — most recently in Yachimovich’s Knesset speech on Monday — to support the Likud-led government if it seeks to make a peace deal that will be unpalatable to the more hawkish coalition partners. That offer is an acknowledgement of the difficulty Netanyahu faces in bringing any peace deal to a government that includes senior ministers, especially Jewish Home’s Economy and Trade Minister Naftali Bennett and Housing Minister Uri Ariel, who in principle reject any territorial withdrawal from Judea and Samaria.

The Knesset will also resume the contentious debate over drafting ultra-Orthodox men into military or national service. The issue played a part in the collapse of the last government, and is central to the election platforms of two major coalition partners, Yesh Atid and Jewish Home. Attempts to rally support for the policy in the Haredi community has been met with violence.

The government is also working on legislation to extend new zoning laws instituted during the last government that makes it easier to initiate construction of new housing.

Come spring, and Shimon Peres’s imminent retirement, the Knesset will also vote for the next president. Potential candidates include former Knesset speaker MK Reuven Rivlin, Labor MK Binyamin Ben Eliezer, former Likud ministers David Levy and Natan Sharansky, and others.

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