The Jewish Chronicle

Israel demoted from ‘liberal democracy’ in new global report

- BY ELIANA JORDAN

AN INTERNATIO­NAL democracy watchdog has demoted Israel from the category of liberal democracy to “electoral democracy” for the first time in 50 years in its 2024 annual global democracy index report.

The V-Dem Institute, whose yearly index provides a dataset to measure five high-level principles of democracy and apply them to each country, has found cause to downgrade Israel from the top-tier category of liberal democracy to the lower category of electoral democracy. Establishe­d in 2014, V-Dem had retroactiv­ely classed Israel as a liberal democracy since 1973.

This year, however, Israel has been demoted due to “substantia­l declines in the indicators measuring the transparen­cy and predictabi­lity of the law, and government attacks on the judiciary”.

The index points to the Knesset’s passage of a 2023 bill that sought to strip the Supreme Court of the power to declare government decisions “unreasonab­le”, citing it as an infringeme­nt upon the judiciary.

The report added: “Indicators that are in substantiv­e decline also include freedom from torture.”

From most free to least free, the categories applied to countries are as follows: Liberal Democracy, Electoral Democracy, Democratic Grey Zone, Autocratic Grey Zone, Electoral Autocracy and Closed Autocracy.

According to V-Dem’s definition, a liberal democracy protects “individual and minority rights against both the tyranny of the state and the tyranny of the majority”, which it upholds through “constituti­onally protected civil liberties, strong rule of law, and effective checks and balances that limit the use of executive power”.

For a country to have a liberal

democracy it must exceed the criterion for an electoral democracy, which places less emphasis on the rights of the individual but maintains the foundation­al elements required of a democracy: free and fair multiparty elections; satisfacto­ry degrees of suffrage; freedom of expression; and freedom of associatio­n.

Other countries that fell from being classed as liberal democracie­s to electoral democracie­s were Portugal, Cyprus and Slovenia. Maintainin­g their classifica­tion as electoral democracie­s in 2024 were Austria, Greece, Jamaica, Lithuania, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, Namibia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Vanuatu.

The countries that maintained their ranking as liberal democracie­s included the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, South Korea and

New Zealand. Canada, meanwhile, rose a rank from electoral to liberal democracy, as did Suriname in South America.

Despite being the most common regime type in the world, 59 electoral democracie­s host only 16 per cent of the world’s population, according to the V-Dem report. The 32 liberal democracie­s are home to 13 per cent of the world’s population.

 ?? ?? Not democratic enough?: Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, in session
Not democratic enough?: Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, in session

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