Channel 12 political correspondent Daphna Liel reports the Knesset is not expected to dissolve this week as the coalition wants to complete the kashrut supervision bill and the bill to split the Attorney General's role. The media bill remains uncertain after the issue of desecrating the Sabbath on the government app was not resolved.
According to Daphna Liel, Channel 12's chief political correspondent, the coalition expects the Knesset to remain in session this week rather than dissolve, in order to pass several key pieces of legislation. The most urgent bills include Shas's kashrut supervision bill, which would enable a mass appointment of supervisors, and Likud's bill to split the Attorney General's role. The media regulation bill, however, faces unresolved hurdles over the issue of Sabbath desecration on the government app, putting its passage this week in doubt. As The Zioneer reported earlier today, coalition MKs had been absent from committee deliberations on the media bill, stalling reform. The broader context: the coalition has sought for weeks to complete a slate of transformative legislation — including judicial overhaul bills — before the expected dissolution, as documented in The Zioneer's prior coverage. The status of the kashrut and attorney general bills remains developing; official coalition statements confirming this timeline have not yet been published.
- DevelopingKnesset dissolution vote expected this week; Haredi legislation set to be buried
- DevelopingCoalition launches legislative blitz to complete judicial overhaul before Knesset dissolution
- DevelopingCoalition accelerates transformative bills as Knesset nears dissolution
- DevelopingCoalition MKs absent from media bill committee talks, stalling reform
Source and signal
- Internal intake
