Dividing a Nation
"[In Israel at the present time] judges are appointed by the president [an otherwise-ceremonial executive position] on the advice f the judicial selection committee, composed of nine members including three Supreme Court justices and two representatives of the Israel Bar Association.""Given that Supreme Court appointments require the consent of seven members the legal profession maintains a de facto veto over the makeup of the court, a situation unique to Israel.""The proposed legislation would turn the committee into an 11-member panel, six of which would be controlled by the governing coalition. The bill was amended earlier this week to give the government control over the first two Supreme Court appointments that come up during its tenure, but require the support of an opposition member for a third and both a judicial representative and an opposition MK for a fourth"Jesse Kline, National Post"We are on the path toward a dangerous collision in Israeli society. We are in the midst of a crisis that endangers the basic unity between us. Such a crisis requires us all to act responsibly.""When there's an opportunity to avoid civil war through dialogue I, as prime minister, am taking a time-out for dialogue.""[I remain determined to pass a judicial reform but in the interim we opt for] an attempt to achieve broad consensus."Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
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Israel's
fifteen-member Supreme Court is free to serve until age 70. Given the
notoriously short term governments thanks to the electoral system of
proportional representation, and the number of political parties
representing every facet of Israeli society, governments have a tendency
to instability. When elections take place, the party receiving the most
votes of a fractured total vote count representing all the competing
parties with their partisan interests, must seek a coalition in support
of a shared government to gain sufficient seats to govern.
In
the instance of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, with him as head
having received the the most votes, alliances were made with right-wing
parties, chief among them the ultra-orthodox. Prime Minister Netanyahu
was minded in agreement with his government partners to make judicial
reforms for the purpose of reasserting elected government authority in
enacting legislation, often usurped by the unelected
social-justice-focused Supreme Court.
PM Netanyahu & Justice Minister Yariv Levin (Flash90) |
The
previous government and its coalition partners were focused on the
left. In the last general election a majority of voters indicated they
were intent on a change of government. Which was not hugely celebrated
by the outgoing government whom the electorate had just 'fired' from
office. They viewed the current government's move to amend the
appointment capabilities of the judicial selection committee
inconvenient to their perspective, in the process muting the authority
taken by the Supreme Court to challenge the elected government.
Claiming
that such a change would deleteriously affect the nature of Israel's
democracy and neuter the Supreme Court, the opposition in the Knesset
set about persuading their supporters among Israel's left wing that
should this change take effect, their rights would be impacted and the
country they love would be democracy-impaired, while the government in
power would become increasingly autocratic. The protests began, with
thousands and tens of thousands of Israelis taking to the streets in
protest.
While
Prime Minister Netanyahu sought repeatedly to reassure the protesters
that Israel's democracy would remain unchanged, asking for patience, the
opposition continued to incite people to remonstrate and the protests
continued and grew with people expressing their vehement denial of the
government to proceed with legislating the change it envisioned to deter
the Supreme Court from its activist agenda, impairing government
initiatives.
Before
long, reservists in the Israel Defence Forces joined the protests,
refusing to show up for duty. Then the pilots began their agitation,
refusing as well to allow the government to proceed with its plans.
Historically the Israeli Supreme Court played an important role in
protecting the rights of Arab-Israeli citizens, of women, of
non-Orthodox Jews and of the gay community. Now, thanks in part to the
agitation caused by the Knesset opposition so recently tossed out of
power, protesters believe this work of the Supreme Court would become
imperiled.
There
is also suspicion that forces outside the country have been involved in
supporting and promoting the protests; specifically charges have been
made that the U.S. State Department is involved. Infamously, during the
Obama administration, in his earlier stint at government, Benjamin
Netanyahu was treated with contempt and diplomatically insulted
repeatedly. President Joe Biden, Barack Obama's successor in the
Democratic Party, inherited all the anti-Netanyahu bias of his
predecessor.
A
Democratic-ruled United States is in no mind to see a right-wing
Israeli government interacting with it. The situation in Israel has
become seriously destabilizing. All the more so when members of its
military, as professional an army as any of the best anywhere in the
world, is facing mass insurrection. A nation surrounded by terrorist
groups, funded as proxies by the Islamic Republic of Iran with its
stated goal of destroying the Jewish state is not in a good place when
it cannot function to its full professional capacity.
Hamas
and Hezbollah have both tested the waters of this sea-change in the
professionalism of the IDF. Exploratory forays by each were apprehended
but if the situation in Israel continues to deteriorate further, chaos
will erupt, leaving the country vulnerable both to its own destabilizing
hysteria with political/sectarian factions becoming ever more
polarized, and from the exterior always prepared to take any advantage
they can detect to pursue their agenda of violence.
With
Monday's decision to explore further negotiations with the official
Israeli opposition in an effort to cool down the fires of partisan
outrage over a decision by the new government to bring the outsize
influence of the Supreme Court into line with those of most other
democratic nations of the world, the impasse must come to a mutually
agreeable conclusion, one that will forestall further disintegration of
civil discourse and continue imperilling the nation.
Israelis protest against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial overhaul plan outside the parliament in Jerusalem, March 27, 2023. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg) |
Labels: Israel, Judicial Reform, Likud Government, PM Benjamin Netanyahu, Protests, Supreme Court
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