A hearing at Israel’s High Court of Justice on Thursday over petitions against the selection of attorney Michael Ravivio as state comptroller turned confrontational when Justice Noam Sohlberg ordered MK Tali Gottlieb removed from the courtroom. The dispute centered on opposition claims that the selection process lacked secrecy after photos circulated showing lawmakers photographing their ballots.
In an interview immediately after leaving the hearing with reporter Yair Altman, Gottlieb said Sohlberg’s move violated her parliamentary immunity and amounted to humiliating the status of a Knesset member. She rejected the secrecy arguments, saying no one was forced to take photos and that a photographed ballot does not necessarily reveal the final vote, because the ballot can be changed in the envelope afterward.
Gottlieb accused the opposition of trying to use the courts as a political tool against the government. “The opposition has learned that it has a home here,” she said. “It petitions about everything. There is no money problem there, no funding problem, petitions, petitions, about everything that moves.” She added that the public can see what is happening, calling it “an absurd petition.”
Addressing Ravivio, Gottlieb said he is a highly experienced professional who is not a politician, and argued that the Knesset selection process ensures his independence from the prime minister once elected. She concluded that “this petition has no chance.”