(Reuters) -
Israel's parliament voted on Monday to dissolve itself in preparation
for an early general election on March 17, after a crisis set in motion
by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's dismissal of two ministers. The parliament's vote
of 93 to 0 formalized a decision to move forward an election that had
not been expected until 2017, in the aftermath of Netanyahu's Dec. 2
firing of Yair Lapid as finance minister and Tzipi Livni as justice minister. Most
opinion polls show Netanyahu being reelected as prime minister, with
many Israelis backing his tough stance on the conflict with the
Palestinians and other security issues. Though
his Likud party is expected to win the most seats, Netanyahu would need
to align with other parties to form a government with majority support
in the 120-member parliament. Netanyahu
launched his re-election campaign on Monday with a promise to cancel
value added tax on basic foods, at a business conference in Tel Aviv. He
called the plan a blueprint for "social justice", in what was seen as a
critical nod to middle-class Israelis and ultra-Orthodox parties whose
support he may need to head the next government. Just
before the dissolution vote, lawmakers voted 47 to 23 to pass a
government-backed amendment to keep open a detention center for African
migrants despite a high court order to shut it by Dec. 22. The
court found in September that holding some 2,000 migrants, under a law
passed in 2013 that permitted them to be held without trial, violated
rights to freedom and dignity. The amendment passed on Tuesday set a 20-month limit to detentions at the Holot facility. More than 40,000 Eritreans and Sudanese are in Israel, human rights groups say. Many entered illegally across the border with Egypt. "In
a democracy you cannot jail people without trial. The court will reject
it, again," lawmaker Nitzan Horowitz of the left-wing Meretz party
said, in protest against the vote. Hotline
for Refugees and Migrants, an advocacy group for the migrants, said it
would appeal again to the court, saying parliament had voted "to waste
taxpayers' money on wrong solutions."
Israel's parliament votes to dissolve itself and set March 17 election
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Reuters
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