Politics08:00 · 3h ago

Israeli Supreme Court Rejects Ariel Municipality Petition on City Rabbi Election

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

The Israeli Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, dismissed a petition filed by the Ariel municipality seeking to compel the Minister of Religious Services and the ministry's director-general to convene the election committee for the city's chief rabbi. The ruling was authored by Deputy President Noam Sohlberg, with agreement from Justices Yael Wilner and Ruth Ronen. The court emphasized that the municipality failed to exhaust administrative procedures with the Ministry of Religious Services before filing the petition, a fundamental principle in administrative law ensuring efficiency and proper dispute resolution.

The court noted that the municipality's initial communication was a brief two-sentence email lacking the key legal arguments later presented in court. This was described as an "insufficient and non-exhaustive" notification, and the municipality did not properly raise its claims with the authorized officials beforehand. Although the municipality claimed to have made a subsequent contact with the ministry, it did not submit evidence of this to the court, preventing judicial review of that communication.

Deputy President Sohlberg clarified that the court's decision does not bar the municipality from pursuing the matter in the future, provided it properly exhausts administrative channels first. He expressed confidence that the Ministry of Religious Services will seriously consider the issue and work toward an appropriate response. The petition was dismissed without ordering the municipality to pay legal costs.

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
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