Opposition leader MK Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid) warned on Monday that opposition parties would boycott the special Knesset plenum session hosting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday if Supreme Court President Isaac Amit is not invited to attend.

Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana has instead invited former MKs to join the session in place of opposition lawmakers to ensure the plenum appears full and free of empty chairs, KAN News reported.

Ohana’s office told The Jerusalem Post that it was not uncommon to invite former Knesset members to such plenum sessions. 

“This is something that happens at every one of the special sessions held in honor of foreign leaders,” Ohana’s spokesperson told the Post

However, Ohana’s office did not respond to a request for comment on whether inviting the former Knesset members was intended to fill seats during a potential opposition boycott.

Lapid called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to direct Ohana to invite Amit, arguing that it would enable the opposition to attend the special session. Lapid cautioned that empty seats during Modi’s visit would send a negative message and potentially harm international relations. 

“Ohana’s primaries are not more important than our relations with a major ally that is one of the most important countries in the world,” he said.

“We want to be at the session; we need to be at the session. Prime Minister Netanyahu must instruct Ohana to allow us to participate in the session,”  Lapid said later on Monday during a Knesset press conference.

“We are not boycotting the plenum, we are being boycotted,” he added.

“Ohana knows that by not inviting the president of the Supreme Court to the event, he is not allowing us to be there. That turns it into a Knesset of half the country, without proper governance.”

 “I strongly urge the prime minister: make sure we are not boycotted during Modi’s visit. We want and need to be there,” he said.

The opposition has boycotted other Knesset sessions in the past over failure to invite Amit. Earlier this month, the seats of the plenum stood empty during a ceremonial Knesset plenum session marking the opening of its building, after Amit was not invited to attend.

The tensions come amid the ongoing rift between the government and the judiciary. The government has refused to formally recognize Amit as the Supreme Court’s president.