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Netanyahu buys political loyalty with controversial legislation ahead of election

Tel Aviv (CNN) — A wave of jeers greeted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as Israel’s parliament prepared for a blitz of controversial legislation in the government’s closing days.

“Shame, leave, go!” dozens of opposition lawmakers shouted on Tuesday.

The commotion was so loud that Netanyahu left the chamber, sitting out the vote entirely. It passed anyway.

Netanyahu’s absence didn’t slow the legislative push his coalition rushed through this week, before the Knesset dissolved Friday ahead of an October 27 election. A cluster of contentious bills were rapidly finalized – primarily designed to satisfy the demands of his ultra-Orthodox and far-right allies, analysts say.

At its core, the push is about preserving Netanyahu’s political bloc. After nearly four turbulent years, marked by mass protests, the October 7 attack, and a prolonged multi-front war, his government achieved a rare milestone: completing a full term in office, something no Israeli government has done since 1988. It’s also something Netanyahu himself, despite being the country’s longest-serving prime minister, had never previously achieved.

That durability rested on a consistent strategy: keeping his coalition partners satisfied at nearly every turn. This week’s end-of-term legislative push is a continuation of that logic.

“Netanyahu is fighting for his political survival, and the Haredi parties are essential to it,” political analyst Nadav Eyal wrote. The goal, he said, is “showing his Haredi partners that he is the only politician who will deliver for them.”

The most politically charged element of the package was legislation that enshrines the mass evasion of ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, youth from military service. While Israeli law requires all 18-year-olds to serve, ultra-Orthodox men have long been exempted under historic arrangements the Supreme Court has repeatedly struck down.

The issue became particularly acute during wartime: the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says it’s short at least 12,000 soldiers. Meanwhile, an estimated 72,000 eligible ultra-Orthodox men are not enlisted, leaving conscript and reserve soldiers to bear the burden.

Facing fierce public opposition to a sweeping exemption law, Netanyahu advanced a workaround to satisfy his ultra-Orthodox allies. One law enshrines Torah study as a foundational state value in a Basic Law, a move that critics say lays the constitutional groundwork for exemptions to survive future Supreme Court challenges. A second bill grants temporary immunity to tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox draft evaders until late January 2027.

Ahead of the vote, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir issued an unusual public warning, calling the legislation “inconceivable” and “inconsistent” with the army’s needs, while cautioning it could erode trust among those who do serve. The letter drew a sharp backlash from Netanyahu’s allies, with some Likud lawmakers calling for Zamir’s dismissal, and Aryeh Deri, chairman of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, accusing him of “dabbling in politics.”

The bill passed regardless but is already facing legal challenges. Within hours of the vote, opposition parties petitioned the High Court of Justice, which issued a temporary injunction freezing its implementation.

The draft-related laws are only one piece of a broader coalition trade-off. Ultra-Orthodox parties supported several of Netanyahu’s own priorities, including legislation curbing the authority of the attorney general, a key component of the government’s broader judicial overhaul. The measure could allow the government to override legal interpretations and potentially reopen efforts to remove Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara – an attempt blocked by the Supreme Court so far.

A separate bill overhauling broadcasting regulation, which critics say expands government influence over the media and threatens the freedom of the press, also passed this week, as did legislation expanding gender-segregated academic programs. The latter drew sharp denunciation from universities and women’s groups, who argue it excludes women, undermines equality and threatens academic standards.

Other coalition partners have used the moment to advance their own agendas. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced a package of settlement funding in the occupied West Bank, including roughly 2.4 billion shekels (approximately $790 million) for new “pioneer neighborhoods” and access roads, alongside the disclosure of an earlier decision to legalize 34 new outposts. Smotrich said these moves would bring the total number of new settlements approved under the current government to 104.

Public opinion appears sharply opposed to the core of the legislative push. A July survey from Channel 12 suggested that 66% of Israelis oppose the Torah-study basic law, while 61% would rather see the next government exclude ultra-Orthodox parties altogether.

Sensing the public sentiment, Netanyahu’s opponents have seized the issue as a major campaign theme. Gadi Eisenkot, the leader of the Yashar party who is currently polling as Netanyahu’s main challenger, denounced what he called “a reckless deal: a bloc in exchange for a state.” Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett called it a “low, anti-Zionist moment,” accusing the government of “showing contempt for the soldiers, their families and the public they serve.”

Netanyahu appears to be betting that the political costs will fade. “Public memory is short,” a Likud insider said. “Preserving a unified bloc matters more than the unpopularity of any single law, and the damage is already priced into his standing,” the source said, presenting a straightforward calculation. “People who stuck with him after the judicial overhaul, after October 7, and after the war – are they going to leave him now?”

Netanyahu, the source added, is “unconcerned” even if the courts intervene, since a legal fight may reinforce the anti-judiciary message already central to his campaign.

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Hawaii Health Department’s enforcement of hemp retailers is helping compliance

Click here for updates on this story    HONOLULU (KITV) -- It's been two weeks since the Department of Health (DOH) began enforcement of Hawaii's hemp retailers. Some critics of the new rules said it's driving them out of business."Millions in damage has already been done," said hemp retailer Lance Alyas.This is one of dozens of hemp retailers here in the islands now at risk of being shut down under new rules being enforced by the Department of Health."Twenty to 30 businesses closed down and a majority of them have stopped selling these products completely," he said.The owner of Oahu Dispensary and Provisions said hemp retailers are living in fear. The DOH began enforcing new laws in July, requiring businesses to register with DOH in order to sell hemp products and ensure operators are complying with limits on THC — the psychoactive compound in pakalolo."That's a crackdown. That's enforcement in and of itself," Alyas said. "It's intimidating when the Department of Health comes to your business and says you can't sell this, you can't sell that, or else we'll close you down or we'll criminally enforce on you."For some businesses like Alyas', that's about 90% of inventory.He's one of almost 60 licensed retailers selling manufactured hemp products, but is suing the state to reverse the new rules."We face revenue loss. We've had employees leave because they don't want the uncertainty," he said. "When we closed down we had countless people — cancer patients included — crying to us because they don't know where to get their medicine."Medical marijuana dispensary Aloha Green Apothecary said previously the state had no real regulations and relied on the federal rules for selling hemp products."What legislators didn't know was that hemp cannabinoids could be manipulated to create higher THC products and these higher THC products can be euphoric and cause intoxication," said Ty Cheng, president of Aloha Green Apothecary. "The issue that many hemp retailers face right now is that they're uncomfortable with the level of regulation that they're being subjected to."The DOH has visited almost 30 registered businesses and said so far compliance has been good. But there are still other businesses likely not following the rules."The THC limits they've been in place for a long time okay and some of the products like the vapes and the smokeables you were never allowed to sell in Hawaii," said Andrew Goff, DOH Office of Medical Cannabis Control and Regulation program manager. "Our goal is not to crack down on people selling hemp. Our goal is to make sure people are compliant. So we're starting with education and with warnings, and to make sure that everyone knows because it is a confusing area."DOH is urging consumers and businesses to read the labels on products that you are buying or selling.Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.
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