Knesset dispersal bill advances with March 16 election date

Blue and White aims to pass the bill into law next week.

ALTERNATE PRIME MINISTER Benny Gantz keeps his distance from his nemesis, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, during Wednesday’s Knesset debate on ending the government’s tenure and calling a fourth general election in the space of a year and a half. (photo credit: DANI SHEM TOV/KNESSET SPOKESPERSONS OFFICE)
ALTERNATE PRIME MINISTER Benny Gantz keeps his distance from his nemesis, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, during Wednesday’s Knesset debate on ending the government’s tenure and calling a fourth general election in the space of a year and a half.
(photo credit: DANI SHEM TOV/KNESSET SPOKESPERSONS OFFICE)
The Knesset House Committee decided on Wednesday by a ten-to-seven vote to advance the Knesset dispersal bill.
Blue and White and opposition MKs supported the bill; Likud, Shas and United Torah Judaism MKs voted against it.
Eitan Ginzburg, chairman of the Blue and White faction and of the House Committee that is legislating the bill, revealed for the first time at a meeting of the committee that the date proposed for the next election is March 16. 
Earlier, Yesh Atid MK Boaz Toporovsky said that his faction, which sponsored the bill, also supported that date. 
But Knesset Speaker Yariv Levin (Likud) said he would insist that the election date be reached by consensus of all factions in the parliament, as has traditionally been done in the past, and not imposed unprecedentedly by one side.
"This vote is a vote against the state," Likud MK Shlomo Karhi told the committee.
The bill will be brought to a vote at its first reading in the Knesset plenum on Monday. Ginzburg hopes to pass the bill into law by the end of next week, which would give the Central Elections Committee the 90 days requested by its head Orly Ades to prepare for the election.
But it is still possible that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz will decide against advancing the election, especially after Likud MK Gideon Sa'ar revealed on Tuesday that he is forming a new party that will take support away from both Likud and Blue and White.
Likud MK Uzi Dayan told the committee: "It is preferable to wait with the elections for a better time."
Joint List MK Ahmad Tibi asked Ginzburg whether the bill was still relevant after Sa'ar's decision. Ginzburg responded that as a veteran of the Knesset, Tibi could figure that out for himself.