The Boston Globe

Bid to overhaul juidiciary delayed

Netanyahu backs off after protests

- By Patrick Kingsley, Isabel Kershner, and Eric Nagourney

JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that he was delaying his government’s campaign to exert greater control over the judiciary, backing off in the face of furious public protest that has plunged Israel into one of the deepest crises of its history.

In recent weeks, Netanyahu had been unyielding in his pursuit of the court overhaul, even as protests drawing hundreds of thousands have erupted across the county. On Sunday, he fired his defense minister for even suggesting that the plan be delayed.

But on Monday, with civil unrest at new heights, with work stoppages hitting hospitals, airports, and schools, and with dissent growing in the military, he relented — if only for the moment.

“When there is a possibilit­y of preventing a civil war through dialogue, I, as the prime minister, take a time out for dialogue,” Netanyahu said in a speech announcing the postponeme­nt.

The concession came as Itamar Ben-Gvir, the head of a powerful far-right political party in Netanyahu’s governing coalition, said he was open to delaying a parliament­ary vote on overhaulin­g the judiciary, giving Netanyahu some breathing room as protests ground the country to a halt.

By backing down, Netanyahu may be able to restore calm to the streets, but he now risks destabiliz­ing the political coalition that he labored to assemble, finally forming a government in December. Many of his hardright government partners had dug in their heels at any suggestion of a delayed vote.

Even as he relented on the timing, Ben-Gvir made it clear that he was not giving it up. “The reform will pass,” he said, vowing that “no one will scare us.”

And it was unclear if Netanyahu’s announceme­nt would, in fact, appease opponents of the court plan.

The Israeli opposition parties appeared to be split over his offer of dialogue. While Yair Lapid, a former prime minister and the centrist leader of the opposition, welcomed it, if warily, Merav Michaeli, the head of the center-left Labor party, rejected it.

“How many more times can we fall into the trap of cooperatin­g with Netanyahu?” Michaeli said, accusing him of “buying time at the expense of our democracy.”

The protesters, too, seemed unpersuade­d.

“So long as the legislatio­n continues and has not been shelved, we will be in the streets,” an informal protest body known simply as “the struggle HQ” said in a statement. “This is another attempt to weaken the protest.”

Still, after the Netanyahu announceme­nt, the head of Israel’s main labor union called off a general strike planned for Tuesday.

The tensions began after the Netanyahu government moved to give itself more control over the appointmen­t of judges — including those who sit on the Supreme Court. It also moved to strip much of that court’s power to review parliament­ary decisions.

On Monday, the White House welcomed word of the postponed vote.

“Compromise is precisely what we have been calling for, and we continue to strongly urge leaders to find a compromise as soon as possible,” said Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary. “We believe that it is the best path forward for Israel and all of its citizens,” she told reporters in a White House news briefing.

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