Religion Magazine

Maklev Won't Let Women Serve but Demands Others Do

By Gldmeier @gldmeier
the Knesset today selected a new person to be head of the Knesset Secretary- the Secretary General of the Knesset.
From the Knesset page on this role:
The Secretary General of the Knesset oversees and manages the parliamentary functions of the Knesset. In this capacity, the Secretary General prepares and organizes the sittings of the Knesset Plenum, advises the Speaker of the Knesset on matters related to procedure and custom, and oversees the implementation of the Plenum’s decisions. The Secretary General, or Deputy Secretary General, are present during the Knesset Plenum’s sittings.
The Knesset Secretary General is in charge of the Knesset Secretariat, which coordinates the agenda for the meetings of the Knesset Plenum with the Members of Knesset, parliamentary groups, committees, the Government Secretariat and the Government ministries. The activity of the Knesset Secretariat is a reflection of the parliamentary activity in the Knesset Plenum and the committees, as it maneuvers the various parliamentary items (motions of no-confidence, motions for the agenda, motions for a quick debate, Questions Hour in the Plenum, bills and parliamentary questions) between the Knesset Plenum, the Knesset committees and the various Government ministries, in accordance with the decisions of the Plenum. In general, the Knesset Secretariat monitors and supervises the parliamentary procedures.
Four candidates had thrown their hats into the ring for this position, including Haredi woman Rivka Ravitz (famously mother of 12, as this gets mentioned every time she does) who formerly served as Chief of Staff for President Reuven Rivlin. 
The Knesset today voted and selected Dan Merzouk (sp?) for the role of Secretary General of the Knesset.
Interestingly, MK Uri Maklev (UTJ) criticized the vote saying that the only reason Ravitz was not selected, despite being eminently qualified, is because she is Haredi. People who talk about women's rights are silent when it is a Haredi woman involved.
1. more than 1 person can be qualified for a position. I would assume all four candidates were qualified. Only one person can win an election - it does not mean the other 3 were discriminated against. If Maklev is going to claim discrimination, he is going to have give more information than just the fact that one is Haredi.
2. Maklev himself, along with the rest of his party, would never allow Rivka Ravitz to be elected and serve for them, so it is ironic that he is criticizing others for the same thing (even if true) that he himself would do and does. Maybe it is ok because the position is called "secretary" and in his mind that is appropriate for women :-) 
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