Knesset Speaker Yariv Levin on Monday set June 2 as the date for Israel's presidential elections. President Reuven Rivlin's term is set to expire in July. By law, the vote must take place no later than one month prior.
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The Israeli president is elected by the members of the Knesset for a single seven-year term. The vote is confidential.
Current hopefuls include former Knesset members Yehudah Glick, Michael Bar-Zohar, and Shimon Sheetrit.
It is unclear at this time whether Jewish Agency chief Isaac Herzog, the son of Israel's sixth president, Chaim Herzog, will enter the race, although it is predicted he would be the leading candidate.
Refuting rumors, former Labor party leader Amir Peretz made it clear last week that he would not bid for the presidency.
Other names that have been suggested as potential candidates include iconic Israeli performer and 2004 Israel Prize laureate Yehoram Gaon, and Miriam Peretz, an Israeli educator and public speaker, the 2018 laureate of the Israel Prize for lifetime achievement.
Candidates must present the speaker with the signatures of at least 10 Knesset members supporting their presidential bid by May 19.
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