From KosherPress.com
The
controversial conversion reform law proposed by MK Elazar Stern
(Hatnua) could take center stage in the political debate next week with
the bill scheduled to be brought back to committee for a final vote.
The
bill has passed its first reading and its process through the Knesset’s
Constitution, Law and Justice committee is almost complete apart from
one final vote on an amendment, which will likely be defeated if voted
upon, paving the way for the legislation’s second and third readings in
the Knesset plenum.
However, Bayit Yehudi has vigorously opposed
the bill in its current format and is likely to seek ways to block its
passage, which could lead to a political showdown over the legislation.
Stern’s
bill seeks to increase access to conversion courts for conversion
candidates by increasing the number of courts and allowing chief
municipal rabbis to establish them.
The chief rabbinate is
strenuously opposed however, arguing that the law would empower rabbis
not sufficiently versed in the laws of conversion to perform
conversions, while also taking too much authority out of its hands, and
Bayit Yehudi and its Deputy Minister for Religious Services Eli
Ben-Dahan have sought to halt the bill for fear of damaging the standing
of the chief rabbinate.
The bill has the potential to
destabilize the coalition given Bayit Yehudi’s strenuous objections. At
the end of the Knesset winter session in March, Bayit Yehudi
successfully appealed to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to halt the
progress of the bill through committee.
Netanyahu subsequently
asked senior national-religious leader Rabbi Haim Druckman, who has
publicly opposed the bill, to mediate between Stern and Ben-Dahan but
the negotiations have broken down without agreement.
A spokesman
for Stern said the Hatnua MK made far reaching compromises on the bill
but that Bayit Yehudi would still not accept the bill.
Two weeks
ago, Rabbi Dov Lior, a hardline national-religious rabbi who wields
significant influence over the Tekuma bloc within Bayit Yehudi Knesset
faction, spoke out publicly against the bill and said it was the reason
behind the kidnapping, and subsequent murder, of Eyal Yifrach, Gil’ad
Shaar and Naftali Fraenkel.
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