The Knesset Constitution Committee is meeting Monday morning to debate several amendments to election law requested by the Central Elections Committee, according to journalist Dafna Liel (N12). Proposals include placing polling stations in nursing homes with at least 75 residents, advancing the deadline for candidate list submissions, and requiring disclosure of AI-generated campaign materials.
The Knesset Constitution Committee is meeting this morning to discuss legislative amendments proposed by the Central Elections Committee ahead of the next elections.
The agenda includes three specific proposals: requiring polling stations in any nursing home or assisted living facility with at least 75 residents; moving up the deadline for submitting candidate lists; and a new obligation for campaigns to disclose the use of artificial intelligence in their materials. The AI-labeling requirement has been a focus of the Central Elections Committee in recent months, as The Zioneer previously reported several related legislative initiatives.
The content and outcome of the committee discussions remain unconfirmed at this stage. The meeting comes amid an active legislative period on electoral and constitutional matters, with the Knesset juggling multiple bills on campaign regulation, political inquiries, and party primaries.
3 developments
- DevelopingCentral Elections Committee initiates sweeping legislative changes ahead of 2026 elections
- DevelopingIsrael's Central Elections Committee drafts bill requiring AI labeling in campaign ads
- DevelopingKnesset Committee refers appointments bill to Constitution, Law and Justice Committee
- DevelopingCentral Elections Committee advances bill to let young voters register outside home address
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