Knesset speaker rejects High Court call to redo tainted state comptroller vote
Amir Ohana says parliament ‘has already spoken’ in favor of Michael Rabello, who won in 2nd round after suspected turncoats were allegedly told to video themselves putting his name in ballot box
by Sam Sokol Follow You will receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page You will no longer receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page and Jeremy Sharon Follow You will receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page You will no longer receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page · The Times of IsraelKnesset Speaker Amir Ohana on Sunday rejected the High Court of Justice’s recommendation that lawmakers redo the June 3 vote for state comptroller, when Michael Rabello, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s longtime attorney, was elected in a tainted ballot.
“The Knesset has already spoken,” Ohana wrote on X.
Rabello’s opposition-backed rival, Supreme Court justice Yosef Elron, led him 60-57 in the first secret ballot, which was inconclusive because a comptroller needs a majority of at least 61 to be elected.
Rabello won 61-57 in the second ballot, when some coalition lawmakers videoed themselves voting, allegedly on the orders of senior Likud officials who suspected the lawmakers had voted for Elron the first time around.
In a Thursday High Court hearing on petitions against Rabello’s election, judges expressed concern that the ballot’s required secrecy was violated, and suggested the parliament redo vote.
Court’ Deputy President Noam Sohlberg called the proposed rematch “a procedural step that does not interfere with the discretion of the Knesset.” Sohlberg told respondents — Netanyahu, Rabello and the Knesset itself — that they had until Monday to respond or face a conditional order against them.
In a brief announcement appended to Ohana’s X post on Sunday, the Knesset speaker said that he was rejecting the court’s advice “for all the reasons detailed in the preliminary response to the petition and during the hearing.”
Knesset representatives had argued during the hearing that neither the different results of the two ballots, nor the fact some lawmakers videoed themselves voting for Rabello in the second round, were proof that orders had come from on high for the lawmakers to vote for him after the first round.
Ohana and other Netanyahu allies regularly accuse the judiciary of overstepping its bounds at the expense of the legislature. The government has repeatedly sought to increase its own control over the judicial system, including by attempting to fire Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara, in a move the High Court has annulled, citing improper procedure.
While the state comptroller is not a law enforcement official, the institution is considered vital for impartial reviews and audits of government.