Jerusalem city garbage trucks dumped tons of trash outside the Finance Ministry in the capital Sunday morning, as the municipality stepped up a campaign to secure hundreds of millions of shekels in funding it says it is owed by the government.

Garbage, also left at other locations in the area, blocked roads in the government quarter, and police advised motorists to use alternative routs.

The action came hours before the cabinet was scheduled to hold its weekly meeting nearby, in the Prime Minister’s Office.

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Mayor Nir Barkat reportedly claims that the capital has not been receiving the budget it deserves, with the reason being that Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon is getting back at him personally for supporting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the last elections and not Kahlon.

עובדי עיריית ירושלים חוסמים כבישים במחאה על שר האוצר שלטענתם מסכל תקציבים לעיר בגלל מאבק שלו עם ראש העיר ברקת: "כחלון תחליט – ירושלים או פוליטיקה" https://t.co/bdQzuQOgjM pic.twitter.com/DulBTE16aA — חדשות 2 (@Channel2News) December 31, 2017

Kahlon, a former minister in Netanyahu’s Likud party, established the Kulanu party as a socially conscious version of Likud, winning 10 seats in the 2015 elections.

Barkat claims the ostensible political vendetta is costing the capital hundreds of millions of shekels every year. The mayor also charges that Kahlon has not advanced in the Ministerial Committee for Legislation a budgeting law that would give Jerusalem a special grant, Hadashot TV news reported.

The campaign has persisted for several weeks under the slogan “Kahlon decide: Jerusalem or politics.” The municipality has also published video clips on social media accusing Kahlon of withholding funding and of ignoring pleas from Barkat to release the money.

Critics of Barkat say that in recent years he has allowed his own national political aspirations within Likud to come at the expense of the city.

In a statement, the Finance Ministry rejected Barkat’s claims and said that Kahlon had actually increased budgeting for the capital.

“During the term of Finance Minister Kahlon, the special grant given to the city of Jerusalem was doubled and reached a record sum. During our term Jerusalem was given special grants for the unprecedented amount of more than NIS 3 billion ($860 million). Furthermore, Kahlon reduced corporate tax in Jerusalem in order to draw companies and factories to the city. Jerusalem stands above all disputes, and the Finance Ministry will continue to strengthen it and its residents exactly as it has done until today.”

Figures released by the National Insurance Institute earlier this month found that the poorest region in the country continued to be Jerusalem, where some 55 percent of children live under the poverty line (down from 58% in 2015), followed by northern and southern Israel.