The Jerusalem Post

More Trump coverage,

In the past, Edelstein criticized leaders who did not come to parliament, but now he is keeping mum

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

When US President Donald Trump visits next week, he is set to give a speech in the Israel Museum, just a short walk from the Knesset. However, he is not scheduled to visit the legislatur­e at all, let alone deliver an address to its members.

In the past, Speaker Yuli Edelstein sharply criticized world leaders who snubbed the Knesset. In 2013, he expressed disappoint­ment that US President Barack Obama did not come to the parliament, opting to speak to a group of university students instead. Soon after, when French president François Hollande did not put the Knesset on his agenda for a trip to Israel, Edelstein declared him persona non grata in the legislatur­e. The pressure worked, and Hollande ended up speaking in the Knesset.

However, Edelstein has kept mum about Trump’s non-visit.

The Speaker’s Office said: “The president’s visit to Israel is considered a work visit and not an official visit. As such, it does not require a visit to the Knesset.”

Some, however, are not buying that line of reasoning.

Deputy Knesset Speaker Hilik Bar (Zionist Union) told The Jerusalem Post: “I think Trump should speak here. We’ve had the prime minister of Canada here, and even people who are less friendly, like the president of the European Parliament.

“Trump should come and be a guest of honor. He’ll be respected by all the factions, which is a continued expression of the alliance between our nations,” Bar said.

In recent cases in which world leaders addressed the Knesset, lawmakers from Arab parties interrupte­d and heckled them, which could be a source of hesitation for the legislatur­e to officially invite Trump. For example, when then-Canadian premier Stephen Harper addressed the Knesset in 2014, several nowJoint List MKs interrupte­d him repeatedly, telling him to sit with the Likud lawmakers.

Bar, however, said that should not be an excuse.

“If the Knesset doesn’t know how to deal with interrupti­ons, then it does not respect itself. If that’s the reason, I don’t accept it,” he said. “I think Trump would be respected by all, and any minor interrupti­ons would be dealt with.”

Earlier this year, Edelstein said some MKs’ behavior when foreign leaders visit deterred him from inviting them.

“I understand the tool of interrupti­on, but I don’t think that it is part of internatio­nal parliament­arian culture, it is Knesset culture,” Edelstein said at a House Committee meeting in February. “Because of these incidents, I found myself once asking world leaders to avoid speaking in the plenum, because I was afraid it would be disgracefu­l.”

MK Ahmad Tibi (Joint List) responded that interrupti­ons are a legitimate parliament­ary tool, and that the Knesset is “not a cathedral.”

 ?? (Brian Snyder/Reuters) ?? PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP delivers the commenceme­nt address at the US Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticu­t, yesterday. He is set to speak at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem next week.
(Brian Snyder/Reuters) PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP delivers the commenceme­nt address at the US Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticu­t, yesterday. He is set to speak at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem next week.

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