The Jerusalem Post

Coalition intends to amend Basic Law to reappoint Deri

- • By ELIAV BREUER

The coalition will propose a law that will bar any judicial review of ministeria­l appointmen­ts and pave the way for Shas chairman Arye Deri to return to the government as a minister. The High Court of Justice forced Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to fire him.

The amendment to the Basic Law: The Government states: “There will not be judicial review by any level of court about any matter connected to, or resulting from, the appointing a minister and removing him from his position, save for the appointmen­t meeting the conditions of eligibilit­y set out in section 6a and 6c alone.”

Section 6a requires the minister to be a resident and citizen of the State of Israel. Section 6c says a person who committed a crime that includes moral turpitude must wait seven years to serve as a minister. The coalition already amended this law in December so that it does not apply to Deri, which allowed Netanyahu to appoint him in the first place.

The proposed amendment will thus be the second amendment to a Basic Law

intended to enable Deri to serve as a minister.

The accompanyi­ng text that explains the law argues that the appointmen­t and removal of ministers is at the “heart of democratic activity” and therefore should not be put up for judicial review. High Court rulings over the years added new qualificat­ions to the explicit list laid out in the law, and this led to “uncertaint­y regarding the fulfillmen­t of the voter’s wishes and sometimes even bending the voter’s will to that of the government.”

The law proposes to block the High Court from examining the “reasonable­ness” or any other aspect of a minister’s appointmen­t, save for the qualificat­ions written explicitly in the law.

The law would enable Netanyahu to reappoint Deri as interior and health minister and presumably bar the High Court from striking down the appointmen­t.

The High Court ruled on January 18 in a 10-1 decision that Deri’s appointmen­t as minister was “extremely unreasonab­le” both due to his criminal past and because he intentiona­lly misled a court about a year ago when he promised that he would not rejoin politics to receive a lenient plea bargain for tax offenses.

Deri said he would continue to lead Shas, and Netanyahu also said he would do everything possible to keep Deri around the decision-makers’

greater damage. • table. Deri sat in on a national security cabinet meeting Saturday night at Netanyahu’s invitation as an observer.

Some judges of the majority refrained from ruling whether the appointmen­t was reasonable, since misleading the court was enough to disqualify him. The minority opinion by Justice Yosef Elron was that Netanyahu was required to turn to the Central Elections Committee chairman, Supreme Court Justice Noam Solberg, to determine whether Deri’s actions in his 2022 conviction had included moral turpitude. If so, Deri would be barred from serving as a minister for seven years. Deri may still remain an MK. National Unity MK Gideon Sa’ar, the previous justice minister, said in response: “The coalition’s new shady deal, which is an attempt to violate a ruling by the High Court and appoint Deri, will fail a miserable failure just like the previous shady deals. The cynical and unconstrai­ned attempt to prevent judicial review ‘for any reason’ is a disgrace.”

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Monday said opposition leader Yair Lapid’s warnings against the government’s judicial reforms were actually a “political campaign” intended on damaging Israel’s economy.

At a press conference ahead of his weekly Religious Zionist Party faction meeting, he cited a video that Lapid had posted on Sunday in which he allegedly said investment­s should be moved from Israel to Singapore.

“I want to turn to you Yair, as a former prime minister and finance minister, what happened to you?” Smotrich asked. “Do you even have a drop of responsibi­lity? Have you become a support of BDS [boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israel]?”

“These moves by the opposition may, G-d forbid, bring about some damage in the short term,” he said. “But I am convinced that Israel’s economy is larger and stronger than them and will continue growing for many years along with the reforms we are bringing with the responsibl­e and balanced budget next month.”

In response, Lapid said: “I fought BDS when Smotrich was still a hilltop youth. I suggest he uses terms whose meanings he understand­s.”

At a press conference before his Yesh Atid Party’s faction meeting, he said it was not him who was damaging the economy but the government. This was a consensus among more than 300 of Israel’s top economists, including Nobel Prize winners, Bank of Israel governors, some 50 former directors-general of economy-related ministries and a range of senior hi-tech executives, he added.

“Versus all of these profession­al voices stand only two people who are saying the opposite – one in the midst of a criminal trial, the other a convicted criminal – Prime Minister Netanyahu and the fired minister, Deri,” Lapid said. “They are the only people who are saying that the legislatio­n will not damage the economy, and, voila, they are also the people who will personally benefit the most from it.”

“That is exactly the reason we said from day one: They cannot lead a reform against democracy because they are not coming from a clean place,” he said. “Their considerat­ions are foreign, and from their perspectiv­e, their interests come before the good of the country.”

“Those who support this legislatio­n should also know – it has a price,” Lapid said. “It will harm all of our livelihood­s, raise the cost of living and make Israel less competitiv­e and less efficient. That is the price, and whoever says otherwise is simply lying.”

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who is facing pressure after the terrorist attacks over the weekend, on Monday told the press ahead of his party’s weekly meeting that the Neveh Ya’acov terrorist attack on Friday night came on his watch, and he intended to “act and fight” to defeat terrorism.

“The fight against terrorism starts from the small things,” he said, adding that he had ordered to implement demolition decrees against illegal buildings in east Jerusalem.

Other steps included rounding up illegal weapons and making it easier for law-abiding citizens to obtain weapons for self-defense, Ben-Gvir said. He also said he had demanded a curfew on the neighborho­od of A-Tur where the terrorist came from and to go “house by house” to collect illegal weapons, but due to “difference­s of opinion with the profession­al bodies,” he did not do so.

Ben-Gvir said he had ordered law enforcemen­t to scour social media to find anyone who holds an illegal weapon. Another response would be to legislate a death penalty for terrorists, he added.

National Unity chairman Benny Gantz, the previous defense minister, criticized what he claimed was the government’s impulsive response to the security situation.

“The government will receive my support for every responsibl­e step that will strengthen security on all fronts,” he said. “However, I am very concerned about what I saw in recent days – ‘instant’ proposals that do not rely on intelligen­ce, or proposals of the defense bodies that are infiltrati­ng the cabinet meetings, which are being held like a neighborho­od assembly.”

“After the Sabbath, when millions were learning about the severe slaughter, the first thing that instigator­s of chaos BenGvir and his extreme cronies did was to complain about how much time it takes to seal off a house and to search for those to blame,” Gantz said.

“Now it is the legal advisers; then it will be the media and the Left,” he said. “With spin you do not defeat terrorism but inflame hate and evade responsibi­lity.”

Gantz said Netanyahu had the ultimate responsibi­lity and was “conducting these shows of hatred. Words turn to violence in the streets, and the prime minister is silent.”

Israel’s security would be damaged by the judicial reform, since security was “first and foremost the strength of

 ?? ??
 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? SHAS HEAD Arye Deri leads a faction meeting yesterday at the Knesset.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) SHAS HEAD Arye Deri leads a faction meeting yesterday at the Knesset.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel