The Jerusalem Post

Ra’am helps cannabis bill pass first Knesset reading

Right’s immigratio­n reform bill defeated • Coalition and opposition unite to pass nature bill

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

New Hope faction head Sharren Haskel’s medical cannabis legalizati­on bill passed its first reading in the Knesset plenum on Wednesday, giving a boost to the coalition of Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.

The bill, which would make it easier for Israelis to obtain medical cannabis, passed by a vote of 54-42, with the support of Ra’am (United Arab List), three months after a more comprehens­ive cannabis bill was embarrassi­ngly defeated. The bill will still need to be legislated to pass into law.

Abbas told the plenum in Arabic that because the bill is solely about medical cannabis, he could vote for it. His party’s votes against the other cannabis bill resulted in its defeat. Likud MKs who back legalizing cannabis left the room and allowed it to pass, unlike last time, when they voted against it.

Bennett came to the Knesset to vote in favor. Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz spoke against the bill because it does not go far enough. He said his ministry would take steps to make the bill unnecessar­y.

Haskel praised the Coalition for passing the bill and said it would help give needed relief to 100,000 people who require medical cannabis. New Hope leader Gideon Sa’ar praised Haskel, saying it was her determinat­ion and fighting spirit that enabled the bill to pass.

Likud MK Yoav Kisch, who co-sponsored cannabis bills

in the past, explained that he voted against it because it would not change anything other than giving a win to Haskel.

In another victory for the Coalition, a bill that would strictly prohibit Palestinia­ns from marrying Israeli citizens to obtain citizenshi­p and would reform the immigratio­n system was defeated in the Knesset by a 57 to 41 vote. The bill’s sponsor, Religious Zionist Party MK Simcha Rothman, brought the bill after failing to reach a compromise on Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked’s Citizenshi­p Law, which was defeated in the Knesset in July.

Religious Zionist Party leader Bezalel Smotrich requested a roll call vote because he wanted video footage of rightwing MKs in the coalition voting against it.

“The government of Bennett, Shaked and Mansour

Abbas voted with the Joint List in favor of the right of return of Palestinia­ns, and that is shameful,” Smotrich’s party said.

Earlier, in a rare act of unity, the Knesset voted unanimousl­y in favor of a bill that requires the environmen­tal protection minister to submit a report on the state of nature in Israel and what needs to be done to protect it. The bill was submitted by Blue and White MK Alon Tal, the first bill that he submitted after entering the Knesset, and co-sponsored by Likud MK Gila Gamliel.

In addition to the annual report, the law establishe­s a scientific committee that will define the species to be monitored, the methodolog­y and the policy measures required to address any sudden loss in species richness.

Tal explained that he wrote the law five years ago and it was submitted at his request by other MKs in previous Knesset sessions. But the bill never passed a preliminar­y reading.

“Nature in Israel finds itself in crisis,” Tal said. “Anyone who reads the Bible knows that the Land of Israel is blessed with extraordin­ary biological diversity. But in recent years, rapid developmen­t and myopia have devastated habitat and ecological corridors.”

Tal warned that, every year, the country loses over 22 square kilometers (8.5 square miles) of open space that provide a home to the many local mammals, reptiles and birds. More than a third of Israel’s vertebrate species are defined as in danger of extinction. The law also meets the commitment­s made under the UN convention on biodiversi­ty, a treaty that Israel ratified in 1995, but which according to Tal was never fully implemente­d.

Environmen­tal activists were pleased that after several years of “drought,” the Knesset finally is set to pass legislatio­n designed to address one of Israel’s most pressing environmen­tal crises.

“While Israel has considerab­le data about local zoological and botanical parameters, the present State of Nature Report does not enjoy an official or statutory status, and decision-makers are largely unfamiliar with its existence, much less its findings,” Tal said. “The law changes this dynamic and will bring the issue of biodiversi­ty to the direct attention of the Israeli government and parliament.”

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? MK SHARREN HASKEL celebrates with coalition members in the Knesset after a vote to reform the regulation of medical marijuana yesterday.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) MK SHARREN HASKEL celebrates with coalition members in the Knesset after a vote to reform the regulation of medical marijuana yesterday.

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