Miami Herald

Biden warns Netanyahu about the health of Israel’s democracy, urges compromise on court overhaul

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN AND AAMER MADHANI Associated Press

NEW YORK

President Joe Biden raised “hard issues,” including protecting the “checks and balances” in a democracy, in a Wednesday meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, pushing Netanyahu to find a compromise on a planned judicial overhaul that has set off protests in Israel and concerns in Washington.

The two leaders sat down and took time to chat one-on-one on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. It was their first meeting since Netanyahu took office at the helm of his country’s far-right government late last year.

Netanyahu tried to play down concerns at the start of the meeting about his contentiou­s proposed judicial overhaul, saying there is “one thing that will never change and that is Israel’s commitment to democracy.”

Biden opened the meeting by stressing the U.S. friendship with Israel as being “ironclad” and saying that “without Israel, there’s not a Jew in the world who is secure. Israel is essential.” But

Biden also acknowledg­ed the tensions with Netanyahu’s government and its policies.

“We’re going to discuss some of the hard issues, that is upholding democratic values that lie at the heart of our partnershi­p, including the checks and balances in our systems,” Biden said. He said they would also talk about a path to a negotiated twostate solution with Palestinia­ns and “ensuring that Iran never, never acquires a nuclear weapon.”

A senior Biden administra­tion official said Biden pushed Netanyahu to find a compromise on his planned changes to the Israeli court system. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting, did not want to characteri­ze Netanyahu’s reaction to what Biden said, only that the Israeli leader understood the need for a compromise.

The location of the long-anticipate­d meeting — a New York hotel room on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly meetings rather than the grandeur of the Oval Office — has been widely interprete­d in Israel as a sign of U.S. displeasur­e with Netanyahu’s new government.

Netanyahu has been a frequent White House visitor over the years, and Israeli leaders are typically invited within weeks of starting their tenure to the Oval Office. But his judicial proposals have raised concerns within Israel as well as the U.S. about his commitment to a democratic system.

Bien held out the possibilit­y of the coveted Oval Office meeting, saying, “I hope we’ll see each other in Washington by the end of the year.” The U.S. later formally invited Netanyahu to the White House, eyeing a meeting in November or December.

Despite the cordiality between the two leaders, the Manhattan setting and Biden’s past misgivings about Netanyahu’s restructur­ing of the courts was a sign of the strains in the alliance.

“Meeting at the White House symbolizes close relations and friendship and honor, and the denial of that shows exactly the opposite,” said Eytan Gilboa, an expert on U.S.Israeli relations at Israel’s Bar-Ilan University.

Biden administra­tion officials have repeatedly raised concerns about

Netanyahu’s plan to overhaul Israel’s judicial system.

Netanyahu says the country’s unelected judges wield too much power over government decision-making. Critics say that by weakening the independen­t judiciary, Netanyahu is pushing Israel toward authoritar­ian rule.

His plan has divided the nation and led to months of mass protests against his government. Those demonstrat­ions followed him to the United States, with large numbers of Israeli expatriate­s waving the country’s flag in protest Wednesday in New York. Hundreds of Israelis also protested outside the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

Early this year, Biden voiced his unhappines­s over the judicial overhaul, saying Netanyahu “cannot continue down this road” and urging the Israeli leader to find a compromise. Netanyahu’s negotiatio­ns with the opposition have stalled and his coalition has moved ahead with its plan, pushing the first major piece of the legislatio­n through parliament in July.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH AP ?? President Joe Biden meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a New York hotel room Wednesday as the 78th United Nations General Assembly met.
SUSAN WALSH AP President Joe Biden meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a New York hotel room Wednesday as the 78th United Nations General Assembly met.

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