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Israeli parliament votes to increase cabinet positions

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IANS Jerusalem
Last Updated : May 13 2015 | 8:22 PM IST

Israel's parliament, the Knesset, on Wednesday voted in favour of a bill empowering Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to increase the number of cabinet positions in the new coalition government.

In 2013, Netanyahu signed a coalition deal with the center-left Yesh Atid party limiting the number of ministers to 18. This number could now be unlimited.

However, as the prime minister has yielded a number of ministerial posts to his coalition partners to court their support, he decided to expand the cabinet so as to please members of his own Likud party, Xinhua news agency reported.

It was tough for Netanyahu to have secured his coalition government only hours before the deadline even though it has a one-seat majority in the 120-seat parliament.

It is expected that the new government is set to be inaugurated either on Thursday or early next week.

Netanyahu is expected to summon members of his Likud party to reveal their positions in the upcoming government. Defence Minister Moshe Ya'alon and Transportation Minister Israel Katz are expected to retain their positions.

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The center-left Yesh Atid party, which insisted on the 18-cabinet-member limit, filed an appeal to the Supreme Court on Sunday, charging against authorisation of the proposal by the outgoing government. The Supreme Court rejected the appeal.

The Zionist Union submitted a proposal to disperse the Knesset on Monday evening, charging that the upcoming government "leans on a casual and technical majority of 61 coalition members", criticising the coalition agreements which "embody significant harm to the value of the political regime", the NRG website quoted the motion as saying.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin also criticised the move to expand the government in an exclusive interview with the Hebrew Walla news website.

He called the move "not good" as it "shakes the public's trust".

"Politicians should stand by the rules they make themselves," Rivlin said.

"Breaking something constitutional shouldn't be supported nor believed in by the public. It would be best if once and for all politicians would determine the items that obligate them constitutionally and stick by them without swerving," he added.

--Indo-/vmAsian News Service

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First Published: May 13 2015 | 8:14 PM IST

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