A team composed of representatives of the ultra-orthodox (Charedi) parties and the defense ministry will meet periodically beginning on Monday to renew planning of a new Charedi conscription bill, a source confirmed on Thursday.

The decision to form the team was made in a meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the leaders of the Charedi parties on Wednesday. Deputy Transportation Minister and Deputy Minister in the prime minister’s office, Uri Maklev, will represent the Lithuanian Degel Hatorah faction; Jerusalem Affairs and Jewish Tradition Minister Meir Porush will represent the hassidic Agudat Yisrael faction; and Shas will be represented by former Knesset member and minister Ariel Atias. The team will also include representatives of Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

The team’s goal will be to come up with a formulation of the bill that will decide the thorny issue of Charedi conscription to the IDF once and for all. The team, accompanied by legal advisers, will attempt to reach a formulation that will answer the Supreme Court’s reservations regarding inequality. However, if this does not succeed, the committee will include an Override Clause specific to this one bill, which will enable the Knesset to re-legislate it in the event that the Supreme Court strikes it down.

Controversy surrounding the previous Charedi conscription law's expiration

Israel’s cabinet on June 25 approved a decision to pass a new Charedi conscription bill by March 31, 2024, and to direct the IDF not to draft eligible Charedi men until then – even though the previous law expired on June 30, and the state currently has no legal basis to continue not recruiting eligible Charedi men.

The Movement for Quality Government in Israel (MQG) appealed to the Supreme Court earlier this month in order to demand that the IDF begin drafting the Charedi male population. However, the court accepted the state’s argument that the law gives the IDF 12 months to draft conscripts whose exemption has run out, and therefore there was nothing unlawful about the decision not to immediately begin drafting eligible Charedi men.