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Monday, June 22, 2009
Rivlin freezes law to facilitate Kadima break-up, allowing "Norwegian Law"

Rivlin freezes 2 of 3 bills at heart of Knesset stalemate
Rebecca Anna Stoil , THE JERUSALEM POST Jun. 22, 2009
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184892442&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull

Opposition leaders planned to meet Monday to discuss the continuation of
their "war of attrition" against the coalition. On Sunday, Knesset Speaker
Reuven Rivlin decided to block two of the three bills at the heart of the
parliamentary stalemate from reaching the Knesset floor on Monday in the
hope of putting an end to the crisis.
Rivlin determined that only the so-called Norwegian Law would be put up for
vote in the plenum, while the powder-keg "Mofaz Law" would be held until a
later date in an attempt to allow coalition and opposition lawmakers to
fine-tune the legislation.

The opposition leaders' meeting will come hours before the scheduled vote on
the Norwegian law, which would allow one minister from each party in the
coalition to resign to allow the next name on the party's list to enter the
Knesset and the minister to return to the Knesset if he quits the cabinet.
The opposition has yet to decide it it will boycott the vote on that bill,
as they did during the first reading of the state budget last Wednesday.

Rivlin met with Kadima powerbroker Shaul Mofaz on Sunday, three days after a
meeting with Mofaz's interparty rival, opposition chairwoman Tzipi Livni.

The "Mofaz Law" would change the rules so that a rebel faction would no
longer need to constitute a third of a party's MKs to break away, but would
only need seven lawmakers. The bill is seen as directed at the right flank
of Kadima, encouraging it to break away and re-join the Likud and the
government.

Mofaz said told Israel Radio following his meeting with Rivlin that he
planned to vote against the bill that informally bears his name.

Although the Knesset speaker is a staunch opponent of legislation that he
thinks would undermine the legislature's authority - a position that has put
him on a collision course with his party chairman, Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu, Rivlin denied Sunday that there had been any worsening of
relations between the two men.

An official in the speaker's office confirmed that the pair was expected to
meet in Rivlin's Knesset office on Monday to discuss the crisis in the
legislature, but downplayed the meeting, saying the two usually met three
times a week to update each other on the political situation. "There are
differences between them, but it is far from a disconnect," said the
official.

The opposition launched its protests at a press conference last Tuesday and
since has boycotted almost all of the Knesset's proceedings, including the
first reading of the budget bill on the plenum floor. The opposition members
says that the three "governance laws," which the government argues will
increase stability, undermine the opposition, and in doing so, the entire
legislative process.

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