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High Court orders Meretz to let Channel 14 broadcast from party headquarters

The judges said the party’s refusal would harm the broadcaster and its viewers.

Meretz Party chairwoman Zehava Gal-On casts her ballot at a voting station in Bnei Brak, Nov. 1, 2022. Credit: Roy Alima/Flash90.
Meretz Party chairwoman Zehava Gal-On casts her ballot at a voting station in Bnei Brak, Nov. 1, 2022. Credit: Roy Alima/Flash90.

The Meretz Party must permit Channel 14 television to broadcast from its campaign headquarters on election night, Israel’s High Court of Justice decided on Monday.

“Barring a media outlet from attending an event that has a significant public aspect, when this policy is aimed at a specific media outlet and it alone, undermines the hard core of freedom of the press,” the judges said in their ruling. “We can’t accept Meretz’s argument that an election event is a closed, private event meant for party activists only.”

The judges said that Meretz’s refusal to allow the station to cover activity at its headquarters on Tuesday evening would have adversely impacted Channel 14 and its viewers.

On Sept. 28, Prime Minister Yair Lapid and his Yesh Atid Party petitioned the Central Elections Commission, asking that it label Israel’s only non-leftist-aligned television station, Channel 14, a propaganda outlet. The Central Elections Commission rejected the petition and ordered Yesh Atid to pay Channel 14’s legal fees.

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