Early career Initially a member of the
National Religious Party and a vice-president of the Zionist Forum, Edelstein founded the
Yisrael BaAliyah party together with fellow Soviet dissident
Natan Sharansky. He was elected to the Knesset in
1996, and was appointed
Minister of Immigrant Absorption in
Benjamin Netanyahu's
Likud-led
government. He was re-elected in
1999, and was appointed Deputy Immigrant Absorption Minister by
Ariel Sharon in 2001. He retained his seat in the
2003 elections, shortly after which Yisrael BaAliyah merged into Likud. Although Edelstein lost his seat in the
2006 elections, in which Likud was reduced to 12 seats (Edelstein was 14th on the party's list), he re-entered the Knesset as a replacement for
Dan Naveh in February 2007. He retained his seat in the
2009 elections after being placed twelfth on the party's list, and was appointed
Minister of Information and Diaspora in the
Netanyahu government. He was subsequently re-elected in
2013 after being placed on the eighteenth spot of the
Likud Yisrael Beiteinu list.
Speaker of the Knesset Following the 2013 elections, Edelstein was nominated by Likud Yisrael Beitenu to replace then
Speaker of the Knesset Reuven Rivlin. His nomination was approved by all members of the party's parliamentary caucus excluding Rivlin, who chose to abstain. It was then approved by the Knesset, with 96 members voting in favor and 8 abstaining. Edelstein was sworn in as speaker on 14 March. Edelstein was elected to the third place on the Likud list ahead of the
2015 election. He was subsequently re-elected to the Knesset and then as Speaker, with 103 Members of the Knesset voting in favor and 7 abstaining. During his tenure as speaker, Edelstein supported the
Nation-State Bill. Ahead of the
April 2019 election, Edelstein was elected to the second place on the Likud list. After the election, he was re-elected as Speaker, with 101 MKs voting in favor and 4 abstaining. Following the
2020 election, a bloc led by
Benny Gantz agreed to replace Edelstein as speaker of the Knesset. Despite this he refused to convene the plenary to vote on his replacement. The
Movement for Quality Government in Israel appealed to the
Supreme Court, which ordered Edelstein to convene the Knesset. On 25 March, Edelstein resigned as speaker to prevent a constitutional crisis. On 26 March, a newly formed coalition led by Netanyahu and Gantz elected the latter to be sworn in as the new Knesset Speaker.
After speakership Following the establishment of the
thirty-fifth government, Edelstein was sworn in as
minister of health on 17 May 2020, and remained as minister until the
thirty-sixth government was sworn in on 13 June 2021. Ahead of the
2022 election, he withdrew from the race, leading to its cancellation due to a lack of candidates. In primaries for the party list held in August, Edelstein was placed on the 18th place on the Likud list and returned back to the
Knesset. Upon the Knesset's inauguration, Edelstein was elected Chairman of the Knesset's
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. over his unwillingness to put forth a law mandating
Haredi conscription. Over a week later, the Knesset House Committee approved Bismuth's appointment, with the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee voting in favor of it shortly after. Edelstein sent his proposed version of the draft law, which would have implemented various penalties for draft evaders, including cancellation of drivers licenses and banning their international travel, to lawmakers earlier in the day. He voted in late October for the
preliminary reading of a bill, which called for annexing the
West Bank, while all other Likud members boycotted it. The following week,
Ofir Katz, who serves as the
whip for the coalition, informed Edelstein that he was being removed from his position on the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. His replacement on the committee is
Tally Gotliv. ==Statements==