Miami Herald

Israel spared fifth snap election as lawmakers pass budget

- BY ILAN BEN ZION

Israel’s parliament passed a national budget for the first time in three years early on Thursday, avoiding a November deadline that would have brought down the new government and triggered another election.

The marathon overnight voting on budget bills in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, was a major hurdle for the new government headed by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, whose fractious coalition holds a narrow majority.

Failure to pass the budget by Nov. 14 would have brought down the government that was sworn into office in June and triggered a fifth election in barely three years, giving former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu an opportunit­y to return to power.

Bennett celebrated on Twitter, writing that “after years of chaos — we formed a government, we overcame the delta variant, and now, thank God, we

passed a budget for Israel.”

The Knesset began voting on a series of budget bills, including hundreds of amendments, late on Wednesday. The assembly opened with Bennett and Netanyahu delivering speeches attacking one another.

Netanyahu’s allies repeatedly heckled and interrupte­d Bennett. Unruly scenes continued. At one point, a lawmaker from Netanyahu’s Likud party was escorted out after calling the parliament speaker a “floor rag,” and an ultra-Orthodox lawmaker was removed after meowing like a cat.

As the opposition sought to drag the vote out into the early hours of the morning, coalition whip

Idit Silman distribute­d candy to keep lawmakers alert.

Early Thursday morning, the Knesset voted 61-59 in favor of a 2021 budget bill, the first approved by parliament since 2018. Later, parliament approved a bundle of new laws, including a congestion tax for the Tel Aviv metropolit­an area, eased import regulation­s and approved a higher retirement age for women. It also backed reforms on kosher certificat­ion that have outraged ultra-Orthodox lawmakers.

A vote on a 2022 budget was scheduled to take place later on Thursday.

On the opposite side of the aisle, Israel Katz, Israel’s former finance minister under Netanyahu, blasted the “terrible budget of cutbacks and taxes“in an Army Radio interview.

The ruling coalition headed by Bennett includes eight parties across the political spectrum with a razor-thin 61 seats in the 120-member assembly.

Israel entered a prolonged political crisis after elections in April 2019, when a right-wing party that had been allied with Netanyahu refused to sit in a government with him.A short-lived national unity government formed to combat the coronaviru­s pandemic collapsed last year after failing to pass a budget, triggering a fourth election.

 ?? ?? Netanyahu
Netanyahu
 ?? ?? Bennett
Bennett

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States