The Hamilton Spectator

President urges consensus after changes

Critics say judicial overhaul underway will concentrat­e power in the hands of the ruling coalition

- ILAN BEN ZION

Israel’s president Tuesday called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition to seek dialogue and compromise after it pushed ahead with a controvers­ial judicial overhaul in a turbulent parliament­ary session overnight.

Isaac Herzog said it was a “difficult morning” following the late-night parliament­ary vote that saw two contentiou­s pieces of legislatio­n pass a preliminar­y hurdle.

The legislatio­n is part of sweeping changes proposed by the government that have prompted vocal criticism in Israel and abroad, drawn tens of thousands of protesters to the streets and spooked investors and financial markets.

On Tuesday, the dollar gained over two per cent against the shekel, continuing a month-long slide that has seen the Israeli currency lose over five per cent of its value against the U.S. dollar. Several Israeli companies have said they are withdrawin­g money from the country, while Israeli newspapers have reported even larger withdrawal­s of cash as investors have grown jittery about the business climate.

Critics say the judicial overhaul underway will concentrat­e power in the hands of the ruling coalition in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, and erode the democratic system of checks and balances.

Netanyahu and his allies insist the changes will better curb an overly powerful Supreme Court.

“Many citizens across Israeli society, many people who voted for the coalition, are fearful for national unity,” Herzog said at a conference organized by the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper.

He urged Netanyahu and his allies to enable dialogue to reach a consensus on judiciary reform.

Late on Tuesday, Netanyahu issued an appeal for dialogue, saying he believed that the gaps could be reduced or closed. “Let’s talk, here and now, without preconditi­ons or excuses, so together we can achieve a broad agreement for the good of all citizens of Israel,” he said.

His critics have called on Netanyahu to freeze the legislatio­n and start negotiatio­ns. Opposition leader Yair Lapid mocked the premier’s appeal.

“Citizens of Israel, I have no pleasant way to say this: Prime Minister Netanyahu is lying,” Lapid said in a statement. “We have been trying to hold talks with them for many weeks.”

Herzog’s remarks came the morning after tens of thousands of Israelis protested outside the parliament ahead of the vote, the second mass demonstrat­ion in Jerusalem in recent weeks.

Israeli Palestinia­ns, a minority that may have the most to lose by the overhaul, have mostly stayed on the sidelines, due to discrimina­tion they face at home and Israel’s ongoing 55-year occupation of their Palestinia­n brethren in the West Bank.

After more than seven hours of debate that dragged on after midnight, Netanyahu and his allies passed two clauses in the package of proposed changes that seek to weaken the country’s Supreme Court and further empower ruling parliament­ary coalitions.

With a 63-47 vote, the Knesset approved measures that give the governing coalition control over judicial appointmen­ts and curtail the Supreme Court’s ability to review the legality of major legislatio­n known as “Basic Laws.” The bills still require two additional readings in parliament to pass into law.

 ?? ?? Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies insist the changes will better curb an overly powerful Supreme Court.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies insist the changes will better curb an overly powerful Supreme Court.

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