The Jerusalem Post

Treasury pulls out of Knesset session on tobacco taxes

- • By JUDY SIEGEL

The Finance Ministry refused at the last minute to allow its representa­tives to take part in the Knesset Drugs Committee discussion on Monday of the taxation of tobacco products.

Committee chairman MK Tamar Zandberg (Meretz) said that “if Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon’s policy is not to raise [tobacco] taxes even when it endangers human life, he must come to the committee to present his position and face public criticism.”

Zandberg halted the discussion when Treasury director-general Shai Babad announced 10 minutes before the opening of the session that he would refrain from sending his representa­tives to discuss the minister’s refusal to equalize taxes on various tobacco products.

“It seems that the finance minister’s policy is to refrain from reporting to the public on any issue with which he is not comfortabl­e. This shows contempt for the Knesset and is a significan­t blow to our work,” she said. “Minister Kahlon is not ready to face public and profession­al criticism of his refusal to equalize taxes on various tobacco products, and once again chooses to avoid responsibi­lity for Israeli health.”

Zandberg announced that in view of the significan­t and repeated damage to the relations between the government and the Knesset, she would appeal to the Kahlon, the cabinet secretaria­t and the Knesset speaker, and demand that the Treasury be told that the officials’ conduct was unpreceden­ted and unacceptab­le.

“The government is already in control of bills through the Ministeria­l Committee on Legislatio­n. The least they can do is come and answer MKs’ questions, said Likud MK Yehudah Glick, who initiated the discussion.

“The public should be informed that the government is contemptuo­us of the public and the Knesset,” he said. “This comes after a bill on the matter was ditched in the ministeria­l committee because they want to wait for [former health minister Ya’acov] Litzman to come back to his post for he will get credit for such a law.” “More than 8,000 Israelis die each year because of tobacco, but the government dillydalli­es on a lifeand-death matter,” Glick concluded.

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