Las Vegas Review-Journal

Netanyahu’s government advances judicial changes despite widespread uproar

- By Tia Goldenberg and Moshe Edri

JERUSALEM — Israel’s government on Monday pressed ahead with a contentiou­s plan to overhaul the country’s legal system, despite an unpreceden­ted uproar that has included mass protests, warnings from military and business leaders and calls for restraint by the United States.

Tens of thousands of demonstrat­ors gathered outside the parliament, or Knesset, for a second consecutiv­e week to rally against the plan as lawmakers prepared to hold an initial vote.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies, a collection of ultra-religious and ultranatio­nalist lawmakers, say the plan is meant to fix a system that has given the courts and government legal advisers too much say in how legislatio­n is crafted and decisions are made. Critics say it will upend the country’s system of checks and balances and concentrat­e power in the hands of the prime minister. They also say that Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption charges, has a conflict of interest.

Simcha Rothman, a far-right lawmaker leading the legislativ­e initiative, presented the proposal to the Knesset during a stormy debate. Several opposition lawmakers were escorted out of the hall by security for screaming at him, while a spectator was carried away by guards from the viewing gallery after smashing the protective glass in anger.

The standoff has plunged Israel into one of its greatest domestic crises, sharpening a divide between Israelis over the character of their state and the values they believe should guide it.

“We are fighting for our children’s future, for our country’s future. We don’t intend to give up,” opposition leader Yair Lapid told a meeting of his party in the Knesset as protesters amassed outside.

Small groups of protesters demonstrat­ed outside the homes of some lawmakers, preventing one member of Netanyahu’s Likud party from taking her special-needs daughter to school.

Netanyahu accused the demonstrat­ors of inciting violence and said they were ignoring the will of the people who voted the government into power last November. Netanyahu for his part, along with his political allies, denied the legitimacy of the short-lived previous government which briefly unseated him in 2021.

“The people exercised their right to vote in the elections and the people’s representa­tives will exercise their right to vote here in Israel’s Knesset. It’s called democracy,” Netanyahu told his Likud party. Netanyahu showed no sign of backing down before the vote despite the pressure, but left the door open for dialogue on the planned changes.

Monday’s vote on part of the legislatio­n is just the first of three readings required for approval. While that process is expected to take months, the vote is a sign of the coalition’s determinat­ion to barrel ahead and seen by many as an act of bad faith.

Israel’s figurehead president has urged the government to freeze the legislatio­n and seek a compromise with the opposition. Leaders in the booming tech sector have warned that weakening the judiciary could drive away investors. Tens of thousands of Israelis have been protesting in Tel Aviv and other cities each week.

Last week, some 100,000 people demonstrat­ed outside the Knesset as a committee granted initial approval to the plan. It was the largest protest in the city in years.

For a second consective week, thousands of people poured into the city from around the country for a mass demonstrat­ion against the planned judicial changes. Many waved Israeli flags, blew horns, and held signs reading “saving democracy.”

“All the steps that are going to take place now in the Knesset will change us to a pure dictatorsh­ip,” said Itan Gur Aryeh, a 74-year-old retiree. “All the power will be with the government, with the head of the government and we’ll all be without rights.”

Earlier in the day, protesters launched a sit-down demonstrat­ion at the entrance of the homes of some coalition lawmakers and briefly halted traffic on Tel Aviv’s main highway. Hundreds waved Israeli flags in Tel Aviv and also in the northern city of Haifa, holding signs reading “resistance is mandatory.”

“We’re here to demonstrat­e for the democracy. Without democracy there’s no state of Israel. And we’re going to fight till the end,” said Marcos Fainstein, a protester in Tel Aviv.

The overhaul has prompted otherwise stoic former security chiefs to speak out, and even warn of civil war. In a sign of the rising emotions, a group of army veterans in their 60s and 70s stole a decommissi­oned tank from a war memorial site and draped it with Israel’s declaratio­n of independen­ce before being stopped by police.

The plan has even sparked rare warnings from the U.S., Israel’s chief internatio­nal ally.

U.S. Ambassador Tom Nides told a podcast over the weekend that Israel should “pump the brakes” on the legislatio­n and seek a consensus on reform that would protect Israel’s democratic institutio­ns.

His comments drew angry responses from Netanyahu allies, telling Nides to stay out of Israel’s internal affairs.

Speaking Sunday to his Cabinet, Netanyahu dismissed suggestion­s that Israel’s democracy was under threat. “Israel was and will remain a strong and vibrant democracy,” he said.

Monday’s parliament­ary votes seek to grant the ruling coalition more power over who becomes a judge. The new system would give coalition lawmakers control over the appointmen­ts. Critics fear that judges will be appointed based on their loyalty to the government or prime minister.

A second change would bar the Supreme Court from overturnin­g what are known as “basic laws,” pieces of legislatio­n that stand in for a constituti­on, which Israel does not have. Critics say that legislator­s will be able to dub any law a basic law, removing judicial oversight over controvers­ial legislatio­n.

Also planned are proposals that would give parliament the power to overturn Supreme Court rulings.

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