Israel

Netanyahu changes loyalty pledge after backlash

October 21, 2010 13:00

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is planning to alter the "loyalty pledge" law voted on last week by the cabinet so that it will include not only non-Jews but any new Israeli citizen.

The original law proposal requiring new citizens to pledge their allegiance to Israel as a "Jewish and democratic state" applied only to those becoming Israeli under the Citizenship Law, and not to Jews who are entitled to citizenship under the Law of Return.

The fierce opposition to the law within Israel and the international backlash seem to have caused the prime minister to announce the change. His advisers hope the move will minimise the claims that the law is racist.

One source in the Prime Minister's Office said this week that it was Mr Netanyahu's intention all along to have the law apply to all new citizens, regardless of their religion.

To get more Israel news, click here to sign up for our free Israel Briefing newsletter.

Support the world’s oldest Jewish newspaper