Former prime minister Ehud Olmert formally requested a pardon on Monday from President Reuven Rivlin, raising speculation that he intends to return to politics.

For the past decade, Olmert has also fought a high-profile legal battle that resulted in his serving 16 months of a 27-month sentence for fraud and bribery, culminating in his release last July.

The president's office said in response that the request would be considered along with any others received. Olmert and Rivlin have been political rivals for decades, since they entered politics together in the Jerusalem branch of the Likud. Rivlin previously accepted a request by Olmert to remove parole conditions that would have prevented him from leaving the country and attending The Jerusalem Post Conference on April 29 in New York.

The Movement for Quality Government wrote Rivlin asking him to turn the pardon request, because Olmert never expressed regret for crimes or for starting a trend of questioning the integrity of the legal establishment.

“He was convicted for crimes he committed in public service, so he shouldn’t return to public service,” spokesman for the movement said.

The designation of moral turpitude, which automatically accompanied Olmert’s bribery conviction, would prevent Olmert from returning to politics until seven years after his sentence is completed. Meretz MK Mossy Raz said it would be especially wrong to give Olmert a pardon that would rescind that moral turpitude designation when the current prime minister is being investigated for corruption.

Zionist Union MK Miki Rosenthal said Olmert should not be pardoned, because...read more at JPost