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"You Lied to Me": Haskel Escalates War With Sa'ar 

A Day After Quitting Government, Sharren Haskel Moves to Break From Sa'ar Entirely

Deputy FM Sharren Haskel accuses Gideon Sa'ar of lying to her and to Israel, seeking to become a lone MK a day after quitting over Haredi draft evasion law.

Sharren Haskel

MK Sharren Haskel filed a request with the Knesset Committee on Tuesday to split off from her faction and become a lone lawmaker, a day after resigning as deputy foreign minister over the coalition's law freezing arrests of Haredi draft evaders.

In a sharply worded letter to faction chairman and Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar, Haskel wrote that he had lied to her and to the people of Israel, and that she was resigning her position as his deputy. The letter marks an escalation from her resignation a day earlier, when she said, "I feel that I can no longer support a government that harms the security of the country during wartime," according to the Jerusalem Post.

Haskel's resignation as deputy foreign minister came immediately after the Knesset passed legislation halting the arrest and prosecution of Haredi men who avoid military conscription. The Times of Israel reported that the law grants tens of thousands of draft evaders immunity from arrest until November 30, and extends that protection going forward, effectively cementing continued mass non-enlistment among Haredi men. The bill passed by a narrow margin, with the Times of Israel reporting a vote of 58 in favor and 54 opposed, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu present for part of the debate but absent from the vote itself after being met with shouts of "Shame" from the opposition.

Haskel was among a small group of coalition lawmakers who broke ranks to vote against the bill, alongside Likud MKs Yuli Edelstein and Dan Illouz and Religious Zionism's Moshe Solomon. She had been an outspoken critic of the legislative push in the weeks leading up to the vote, telling the Jerusalem Post last month that the legislation amounted to "backstabbing" soldiers serving during wartime and calling it "absolutely morally wrong."

Sa'ar
Sa'ar (Photo: Shutterstock )

According to the Hebrew-language request Haskel filed with the Knesset Committee, she argued that the clause permitting a faction split is meant to protect a lawmaker's freedom of action when the faction itself changes its character or political identity. She wrote that she has remained loyal to the founding principles of the National Right, the faction under which she was elected, and that the fundamental change instead took place within the faction itself, which chose to merge into Likud and now operates as an inseparable part of it.

The National Right faction pushed back forcefully. In a statement posted to X, the faction called Haskel's request "baseless, brazen, and ungrateful," and suggested her real motivation was frustration over losing access to party campaign financing that she hoped to leverage in negotiations with another party ahead of the next election.

A split into a standalone faction would carry practical significance beyond politics. Under Israeli law, a faction split requires the support of at least one third of a faction's members, a threshold Haskel does not meet on her own as deputy chair. That legal hurdle suggests her request is likely only the opening round of a battle that could be settled in the courts or through a negotiated agreement with Sa'ar.

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