Two political countdown clocks started ticking on Thursday.The first started after President Reuven Rivlin officially gave the Knesset, represented by Speaker Yuli Edelstein, the mandate to find someone who 61 MKs support to form the next government. That is a 21-day clock; the buzzer will go off on December 11 at midnight.The second started when Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit announced that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust. Now, Netanyahu has 30 days - until December 22 - to ask the Knesset to grant him immunity from prosecution.

Under normal circumstances, when an MK is charged with a crime, the attorney-general must submit a copy of the indictment to the Knesset. Then the MK may go to the Knesset House Committee and ask for immunity. At that point, the legal proceedings against him or her are frozen and Mandelblit cannot submit the indictment to the courts.The House Committee would then vote, and if it grants the lawmaker immunity, it must go to a second vote in the plenum.But these aren’t normal circumstances.There have not been regular Knesset committees in almost a year, since the 20th Knesset was dissolved in December of 2018.

We’re now on the 22nd Knesset, the election was over two months ago, but there still is no opposition or coalition to decide who heads which committees and who populates them.So there’s no House Committee for Netanyahu to petition. And, while that 21-day clock is ticking, which means that there’s a chance there will be a new coalition to form the committee in less than 30 days, it seems less likely than ever, post-indictment.But there’s a very recent precedent that tells us how this will work. Mandelblit charged Likud MK Chaim Katz, at the time labor and social services minister, with fraud and breach of trust in August. Katz had to resign from the cabinet, as all ministers other than the prime minister must do, and asked the House Committee for immunity from prosecution. Since the Knesset was in the same state of limbo in August as it is now, the vote on Katz’s immunity has not happened yet, and Mandelblit has not submitted his indictment to the courts.So it looks like any progress on the legal front for Netanyahu will have to wait for there to be a coalition.

If there’s a third election, which seems quite likely, then that won’t be until April or even May - and that’s if a government is finally formed.When there eventually is a functioning House Committee, there are four reasons for which an Netanyahu can request immunity. The first is that the crime was committed while fulfilling his job as an MK. The second is that the indictment was submitted with bad intentions and or due to discrimination. The third reason is that the crime will not significantly harm the public interest, and the final reason is that requiring the MK to go through the criminal justice process will significantly harm the public interest.In Netanyahu’s Thursday night speech, he accused the State Attorney’s Office of bias against him because he is right-wing, and he has said that the regulatory changes behind Case 4000 were for the good of the media market. It’s also likely that Netanyahu will be very distracted from the premiership during the legal proceedings. As such, he has plenty of legitimate reasons, according to the law, to ask for immunity.Whether the committee agrees, however, is another matter. Read more at JPost