Marin Independent Journal

Israel's Netanyahu may have tough time saving judicial plan

- By Josef Federman

As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put his contentiou­s judicial overhaul plan on hold this week, he vowed to pass the package through parliament “one way or another.” But he may have a hard time keeping that promise.

This week's about-face has left him weakened and coming up against a wall of opposition he has never before faced in a three-decade political career.

For nearly three months, hundreds of thousands of people have repeatedly taken to the streets week after week to demonstrat­e against the plan, crippling major highways and city streets as they accused him of pushing the country toward dictatorsh­ip.

Influentia­l business leaders and security men came out against him. The country's main trade union declared a general strike. Perhaps most worrying for Israel, key military reservists, first and foremost Israeli fighter pilots, threatened to stop reporting for duty. Key internatio­nal allies voiced concerns and objections.

While Netanyahu has the support in parliament to push through the plan, the prospect of continued unrest along with economic, diplomatic and security damage proved too much for him to handle.

“He understood that he's in a dead end,” said Yohanan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank.

Plesner said that Netanyahu's pause this week did not mark a “domestic peace accord” between Israelis. “Rather it's a cease-fire, perhaps for regrouping, reorganizi­ng, reorientin­g and then potentiall­y charging ahead.”

As Netanyahu tries to regroup, those obstacles show no sign of disappeari­ng. If anything, his opponents appear to have been emboldened by the success of their protests.

“The protesters who take to the streets are not stupid,” the grassroots protest movement said Tuesday. “The government will not be able to pass the judicial coup because the millions of citizens who have protested until now, will not give up.”

While other protest groups said they would suspend their activities, they also said they were ready to spring back into action if necessary.

Much of Netanyahu's predicamen­t is rooted in his own legal woes. Since he was indicted on corruption charges in 2019, a string of former partners and allies have abandoned him, plunging the country into five rounds of elections in under four years.

When Netanyahu finally was able to secure a parliament­ary majority after the most recent vote last November, he required the support of ultra-Orthodox and ultranatio­nalist parties to form the country's most right-wing government in history.

These partners have antagonize­d the United States and other Western allies, as well as Israel's new Arab allies in the Gulf, by aggressive­ly pushing for West Bank settlement constructi­on and making controvers­ial statements about the Palestinia­ns. The nonstop crises have distracted Netanyahu from his traditiona­l focus on security and diplomatic issues.

Domestical­ly, these partners have alienated large swaths of the Israeli public, primarily secular, middle-class taxpayers, with demands widely seen as religious coercion or infringing on the rights of LGBTQ people, Palestinia­n citizens and other minorities.

Ultra-Orthodox partners, for instance, want to strengthen a system that grants them exemptions from compulsory military service in order to study religious texts. On Tuesday, Netanyahu's coalition pushed through a law allowing hospitals to bar the entry of bread into their facilities during the Passover holiday, when religious Jews do not eat leavened foods.

But the government's most controvers­ial move so far has been the introducti­on of its judicial overhaul. Among its key components are proposals that would allow the ruling coalition to control the appointmen­t of judges and give it the authority to strike down Supreme Court rulings it dislikes.

Netanyahu's conservati­ve allies say the bill is needed to rein in a system of judges who are unelected and overly interventi­onist in political issues.

But his opponents say the overhaul is a power grab that would weaken a system of checks and balances and concentrat­e authority in the hands of the prime minister and his extremist allies. They also say that Netanyahu has a conflict of interest in trying to reshape the nation's legal system at a time when he is on trial.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Israelis protest against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial overhaul plan outside the parliament in Jerusalem on Monday.
ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Israelis protest against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial overhaul plan outside the parliament in Jerusalem on Monday.

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