Likud to Bring Bill to Dissolve Knesset Next Week

YERUSHALAYIM

Yamina MK Nir Orbach seen leaving the Prime Minister’s office in Yerushalayim on Sunday. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The Likud intends to bring a bill to dissolve the Knesset and initiate news elections next Wednesday.

If Yamina rebel MK Nir Orbach will vote for the bill, there would be a majority in favor of it, but Orbach does not want to crown Foreign Minister Yair Lapid as the interim Prime Minister.

According to the coalition agreement, Lapid would automatically become prime minister of a caretaker government during an election and until a new government would be formed, if the current government was brought down by two MKs from Bennett’s camp: Orbach and MK Idit Silman.

If the bill passes, an election would be held on the first Tuesday after 90 days that does not fall on a chag, Oct. 25.

Meanwhile, the coalition will seemingly be defeated in every vote that will take place in the Knesset on Wednesday, due to rebellious MKs from four different parties.

Wednesday is the day that the Knesset votes on bills presented by the opposition.

The coalition is expected to boycott all the votes in an effort to minimize the humiliation from the losses, as it did in the only vote in the Knesset plenum on Monday. No bills were brought to a vote on Tuesday.

No progress was made in quelling the rebellions by MKs Nir Orbach (Yamina), Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi (Meretz), Mazan Ghanaim (Ra’am) and Michael Biton (Blue and White).

One bill that could be particularly problematic is the so-called anti-Bibi bill, which would prevent an MK under indictment from forming a government. The bill is supported by all of the MKs in the coalition, except for Yamina, as well as by the Joint List, who are in the opposition.

MK Eli Avidar said passing the bill into law quickly was the best way to keep the coalition together. He said opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu would not hurry to initiate an election if the bill passed.

Avidar also suggested immediately firing Orbach from his powerful role as head of the Knesset House Committee.

Yamina officials who spoke to Orbach on Tuesday said they still hoped he would return to the coalition if the problems within Ra’am and Meretz were resolved.

Yamina officials said that the final straw for Orbach was Bennett’s request for him to vote for consensus bills in the Knesset and set aside his protest.

“He was angry that they were counting on him for the bills,” a Yamina official said. “He left because they weren’t taking him seriously enough that they asked him to vote. That very notion annoyed him.”

Orbach is expected to remain at home on Wednesday and not participate in any Knesset votes. The only rebel expected to vote against the coalition in the Knesset on Wednesday is Rinawie Zoabi.

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