Current sectionIsrael NewsIsrael Political NewsThe justices unanimously ruled that the second voting round last month, in which Michael Rabello, Netanyahu's lawyer, was elected, contained a material flaw in the secrecy of the vote, which necessitates its cancellationShare to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribe03:56 PM • July 06 2026 IDTIsrael's governing coalition has not scheduled a revote for the appointment of Israel's state watchdog, despite four days passing since the country's High Court of Justice ordered a revote on Thursday.CommentsIn the NewsDespite Top Court Order, Coalition Yet to Schedule Revote on State WatchdogHow an Abandoned Jerusalem Airport Embodies Netanyahu's Bleak Vision for IsraelAs Israel Lacks Hundreds of Patrol Officers, West Bank Staff DoublesIran Is Smartly Using the Palestinians, and Only Israel Can Stop ItThe West Bank Settlers Drifting Away From Israel's Far RightRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIIsrael 2026 Election Poll Tracker: The Latest ProjectionsIsrael Has Long Ignored Warnings of a 'Diplomatic Tsunami.' Now It Has ArrivedAn Israeli Principal Desegregated a Tel Aviv School. Here's What HappenedDumber Than a 10-year-old: Are Israeli Students Really That Stupid?103 Nails on the Map: How Israel's Government Is Burying the Two-state SolutionRep. Dan Goldman Says Support for Israel Cost Him New York Democratic Primary
Despite top court order, coalition yet to schedule revote on state watchdog
The justices unanimously ruled that the second voting round last month, in which Michael Rabello, Netanyahu's lawyer, was elected, contained a material flaw in the secrecy of the vote, which necessitates its cancellation









