The bill allows such decisions to take effect immediately, and passed in its second and third reading late Monday night after deliberations in the Knesset Coronavirus Committee.

Knesset commitee on coronavirus meets to discuss furher regulations, April 7, 2020 (photo credit: KNESSET SPOKESPERSON'S OFFICE)
Knesset commitee on coronavirus meets to discuss furher regulations, April 7, 2020 (photo credit: KNESSET SPOKESPERSON’S OFFICE)

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could soon get to make decisions on emergency coronavirus regulations by himself, with just a rubber stamp of a quick cabinet vote, according to a bill that was passed in his cabinet on Monday.

The bill allows such decisions to take effect immediately, and passed in its second and third reading late Monday night after deliberations in the Knesset Coronavirus Committee.

According to the bill, the Knesset committee will discuss decisions made by the government and decide whether to approve them, in whole or in part, within seven days of when they passed. An extension of up to three more days is allowed.

To the extent that the relevant committee does not approve the government’s decision within the aforementioned period, the decisions will be brought to the Knesset plenum as soon as possible.

Alongside the Knesset approval process, the decisions will come into effect and will be implemented immediately upon government approval.
If the committee or the Knesset plenary decides not to approve said order, or if it has not made a decision on the matter within the allotted time, the validity of the order will expire.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid told his Yesh Atid-Telem faction the proposed bill was undemocratic and would allow Netanyahu to make decisions on his own. “The big coronavirus law means we can shut down this theater and tell us all to go home,” he told the Knesset on Sunday.

“There is no longer a need for the Knesset,” he said. “There is only one branch in the land of Israel. The legislative branch is no more.”

Meretz leader Nitzan Horowitz said the bill would turn Netanyahu into a dictator and allow him to violate civil rights with no oversight.

But Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn (Blue and White) told the Knesset Law, Constitution and Justice Committee: “The bill is an attempt to balance between the need to work quickly for the citizens and the need for parliamentary oversight.”

As reported by The Jerusalem Post