Illustrative: A man outside the Chief Rabbinate headquarters in Jerusalem, October 31, 2024 (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Knesset passes law restoring Chief Rabbinate’s monopoly over kosher certification

Coalition passes raft of contentious laws aimed at appeasing Haredi parties, which say their ‘rift’ with Netanyahu is over

by · The Times of Israel

The Knesset on Tuesday night voted 46-41 to give final approval to legislation restoring the Chief Rabbinate’s exclusive control over kosher certification, one of a series of laws that the ultra-Orthodox parties demanded be passed in exchange for support for key coalition bills.

The law, which was championed by the Shas party, will reverse reforms enacted by the previous government that allowed private Orthodox organizations to issue kosher certificates in their own name, provided they meet the state’s standards.

Opponents of the new law argue that it will eliminate competition and ultimately increase costs for and harm businesses and consumers.

The law’s passage  came a week after the Chief Rabbinate appeared to authorize the liberal Tzohar Rabbinical Organization to issue kosher certificates under Israeli law for the first time, following a High Court ruling last month ordering it to withdraw its refusal to recognize the group — a move that prompted pushback from the current Religious Services Ministry. But within hours, the decision came under dispute, with senior officials saying the approval of Tzohar had not been properly authorized and therefore had no legal standing.

The new legislation passed Tuesday would enshrine that only the Chief Rabbinate can issue kosher certification.

In Israel, the right to use the word “kosher” on food labeling is highly regulated, with only certification bodies recognized by the Rabbinate allowed to recognize a product or establishment as meeting religious requirements.

The bill forms part of the coalition’s agreement with the ultra-Orthodox parties to advance several contentious Haredi priorities, including a Basic Law enshrining Torah study as a fundamental state value and a measure freezing the arrest of Haredi draft dodgers, both of which were passed into law this week.

In exchange, Haredi parties would support key coalition legislation, including bills establishing a politically appointed probe into the failures surrounding the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attack; curbing the powers of the attorney general; and overhauling the media.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (foreground) walks past ultra-Orthodox MKs as the Knesset prepares to pass a law banning the arrests of draft dodgers that will effectively freeze ultra-Orthodox enlistment into the IDF for at least the next seven months, July 14, 2026. Netanyahu left the chamber before the vote itself. At center, with hands around his mouth, is UTJ MK Meir Porush. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Haredi parties say ‘rift’ with Netanyahu over, next government must pass permanent exemptions

Following Tuesday’s passage of the law temporarily banning the arrest and prosecution of Haredi draft dodgers, ultra-Orthodox politicians in the Knesset told reporters that their “rift” with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was over.

One senior member of a Haredi party told Channel 12, however, that, after the October 27 election, if the results go their way, the Haredi parties will demand legislation permanently exempting all ultra-Orthodox men from military service, and that they will insist this legislation be passed before formally joining another Netanyahu-led coalition. (Ultra-Orthodox young men mostly do not do military or national service, but this is not enshrined in law.)

“Netanyahu proved today that we are a single [political] bloc, but that is not enough,” the unnamed senior Haredi politician was quoted as saying. “After the elections, we will demand an IDF draft law permanently [exempting Haredim from IDF service], before we establish a government. We’ve learned how to work with him.”

Haredi men block Route 4 during a protest against the jailing of draft dodgers, near Bnei Brak, June 17, 2026 (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)

Channel 12 quoted unnamed military sources lamenting that, with today’s law, the IDF now has no leverage to get Haredim to serve, even as it urgently needs thousands more combat soldiers, and that it will now also have to free several dozen Haredi draft dodgers from military jails.

Before the law was passed, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir called the proposal “inconceivable,” saying it was “clearly and unequivocally inconsistent with the IDF’s needs” and amounted to “providing mass exemptions from prosecution.”

Some 72,000 ultra-Orthodox men aged 18 to 24 are currently believed to be eligible for military service, but have not enlisted. The IDF has said repeatedly in recent months that it urgently needs 12,000 new recruits amid the ongoing multifront conflict.

The law has drawn fierce opposition from reservists, Knesset legal advisers and much of the public.

Ultra-Orthodox parties have sought to enshrine military service exemptions following a 2024 High Court ruling that found them unconstitutional, leading to some state benefits being curtailed. Until now, tens of thousands of Haredi yeshiva students were considered draft dodgers and are subject to arrest.