"No Torah Law, No Other Laws": Haredi Ultimatum Forces Netanyahu to Scramble for Votes on Basic Law
Knesset votes today on Basic Law: Torah Study in preliminary reading • Netanyahu works to secure majority as coalition tensions flare | Shas and UTJ freeze all legislation until Torah law advances (Israel News)

The Knesset plenary convenes Wednesday morning for what has become the most politically charged legislative session of the year: a preliminary vote on Basic Law: Torah Study, the haredi-backed constitutional amendment that has fractured Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition and triggered an ultimatum from his ultra-Orthodox partners.
Netanyahu spent the past 24 hours working the phones and holding emergency consultations in a desperate bid to secure the votes needed to advance the controversial legislation. The stakes could not be higher: Shas chairman Aryeh Deri has made clear that if the Torah law fails, the haredi parties will freeze all other coalition legislation indefinitely.
"We are demanding that Basic Law: Torah Study be brought to a vote this week, as a condition for supporting any other law," Deri declared in a statement that sent shockwaves through the coalition. "This will be a historic declaration of the supreme value of Torah and the contribution of Torah scholars to the people of Israel and its security."
Last-Minute Compromise to Save Religious Zionism Support
The legislation hit a critical snag when Religious Zionism lawmakers threatened to bolt over language that appeared to equate yeshiva students with IDF soldiers. In a dramatic overnight session of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation, coalition negotiators hammered out revised wording designed to preserve the law's core intent while avoiding a direct equivalence that would enrage the Israeli public.
According to sources familiar with the discussions, the amended text will emphasize the foundational importance of Torah study without creating parity between those who serve in uniform and those who do not. The compromise emerged after intense pressure from both Likud and Religious Zionism, with party leaders warning that the original formulation risked catastrophic political fallout.
"Religious Zionism will not permit the advancement of any law that equates the status and conditions of those who avoid military service with those who serve in the IDF," the party stated in an official announcement. "The faction will support only a law that establishes Torah study as a foundational value without creating equivalence between yeshiva students and IDF soldiers."
Opposition Prepares Assault on Coalition Unity
Opposition lawmakers are preparing a full-scale parliamentary assault designed to exploit the coalition's internal divisions. Senior opposition figures plan to force coalition members into uncomfortable on-the-record votes, calculating that public pressure may peel away enough defectors to sink the legislation.
Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett launched a blistering preemptive attack on the proposed law, framing it as a betrayal of IDF soldiers currently fighting in Lebanon. "After the public blocked the original draft evasion law, the coalition is trying to pass a draft evasion law on steroids, under the cynical and false name 'Torah Study Law,'" Bennett charged. "This is a law that establishes that the status of the draft evader is identical to that of a soldier."
Bennett vowed that a future government under his leadership would dismantle what he called "the haredi state that has grown within the State of Israel," pledging to integrate ultra-Orthodox men into both military service and the workforce. The comments reflect the explosive political volatility surrounding military conscription in Israeli society, particularly as the war grinds on with no end in sight.
The Broader Coalition Crisis
The Torah law showdown arrives amid deepening fractures within Netanyahu's governing coalition. Leaked statements from Deri revealed that the Shas chairman privately blames Netanyahu for mishandling the draft crisis and triggering the recent confrontation with influential Lithuanian rabbinic leader Rabbi Dov Lando.
Meanwhile, mainstream haredi aid organizations that assist yeshiva students facing draft enforcement have erupted in fury at coalition lawmakers, accusing them of abandoning the groups financially while extremist organizations gain influence among young ultra-Orthodox men.
Coalition sources confirmed that Netanyahu has offered reserved spots on the Likud list to representatives from both Religious Zionism and Otzma Yehudit in an effort to secure their support for the Torah law. The move signals the prime minister's recognition that his political survival may depend on keeping the haredi parties inside the coalition tent, regardless of the public backlash.
The preliminary vote is scheduled for late Wednesday morning. If the law advances, it will proceed to committee review before returning for second and third readings. Opposition leaders have vowed to use every parliamentary tool available to delay and obstruct the legislation's progress.