Haredi Parties Freeze Coalition Support After Daycare Law Pulled From Knesset Vote
Shas and UTJ announce they won't vote with coalition today after daycare subsidy bill removed from agenda • Move deepens political crisis as Smotrich claims credit for changes | The full story (Israel News)

Israel's haredi parties delivered a sharp blow to the coalition Monday afternoon, announcing they will not support any government legislation in the Knesset plenum after coalition chairman Ofir Katz pulled a critical daycare subsidy bill from today's scheduled vote at the last minute.
In a joint statement, Shas and United Torah Judaism declared: "We have just informed the coalition chairman that due to the failure to bring the daycare law to the agenda, we will not vote in favor of coalition legislation in the Knesset plenum today."
The move marks a significant escalation in tensions between the haredi parties and the Netanyahu government, coming just days after the controversial Basic Law: Torah Study passed its preliminary reading amid fierce opposition protests. The daycare legislation was supposed to restore subsidies for young kollel families who received draft orders — a critical issue for thousands of haredi families facing financial crisis.
Behind the Scenes: Intense Pressure Campaign
Sources familiar with the matter confirmed that haredi factions had been applying intense pressure behind the scenes to accelerate the daycare bill's legislative process. The original plan called for a first reading vote today, followed immediately by committee deliberations aimed at completing second and third readings within two weeks.
The urgency stems from a Supreme Court ruling that blocked daycare subsidies for yeshiva students who received IDF summons. Haredi leaders view the legislation as essential to preventing economic collapse among young families in their communities, where fathers study full-time in kollel while raising multiple children.
However, legal experts and political analysts warn that even if the daycare law passes, Supreme Court justices are unlikely to permit the subsidies to resume without broader legislation addressing the status of Torah scholars and their exemption from military service — a far more contentious issue that has paralyzed Israeli politics for months.

Smotrich's Credit-Grabbing Sparks Fury
The political crisis has been compounded by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich's recent attempts to claim credit for changes to the daycare law, specifically a clause giving preference to IDF reservists. Smotrich, chairman of the Religious Zionism party, suggested publicly that the modifications came at his insistence — a claim that infuriated haredi leaders.
United Torah Judaism chairman MK Moshe Gafni lashed out at Smotrich in unusually harsh terms: "The desperate attempt by Smotrich to collect votes by presenting an 'achievement' that has existed for many years is ridiculous and disconnected from reality. The Israeli public is far more intelligent than Religious Zionism believes."
Shas chairman Aryeh Deri went further, according to sources close to him. "I'm considering amending the electoral threshold law in the Knesset," Deri reportedly told associates. "Maybe that way Smotrich will stop the unnecessary harassment and provocations on every issue, and we'll also save the state billions of shekels."
Senior coalition officials rejected Smotrich's claims outright, stating that the reservist preference clause had been incorporated into the legislation long before Religious Zionism raised any objections. The dispute reveals deepening fractures within Netanyahu's coalition, where haredi parties command significant leverage but face mounting challenges from their nationalist partners.

The Broader Context: Torah Law and Coalition Tensions
The daycare bill controversy erupted just one week after the Knesset passed the Basic Law: Torah Study in a preliminary 56-43 vote. That legislation, which would enshrine Torah study as a constitutional value and potentially shield yeshiva students from draft enforcement, triggered massive protests and fierce condemnation from opposition parties.
The haredi freeze on coalition support signals that Shas and UTJ are willing to use their parliamentary power to force Netanyahu's hand on issues critical to their constituents. With the coalition holding only a narrow majority, the loss of haredi votes on any given bill could prove fatal to government legislation.
Meanwhile, Finance Minister Smotrich has allocated 3.5 billion shekels to settlements and Religious Zionist institutions in the 2026 budget, even as haredi families face mounting economic pressure. The contrast has not gone unnoticed in haredi communities, where leaders are beginning to question whether their political alliance with Netanyahu's coalition serves their constituents' interests.
Further updates to follow as the political crisis develops.