The Columbus Dispatch

Israeli AG: Netanyahu cannot be involved in legal overhaul

- Tia Goldenberg ASSOCIATED PRESS

TEL AVIV, Israel – Israel’s attorney general has told Benjamin Netanyahu that he must not be involved in an overhaul to the country’s judicial system proposed by his government because it would amount to a conflict of interest over the prime minister’s corruption trial, according to a letter made public Thursday.

Netanyahu’s new far-right government has made changing the legal system a centerpiec­e of its legislativ­e agenda and despite mounting public criticism, has charged ahead with steps to weaken the Supreme Court and grant politician­s less judicial oversight in their policymaki­ng.

Attorney General Gali Baharav-miara’s office also released her legal opinion concerning the proposed changes, and said they would deal “a serious blow to the system of checks and balances” in Israel’s government, and would give the executive and legislatur­e “broad and effectivel­y unlimited authority.”

Netanyahu is on trial on charges of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals involving influentia­l media moguls and wealthy associates. He denies wrongdoing.

“You must avoid as part of your role as prime minister involvemen­t in initiative­s related to the legal system,” Baharav-miara wrote to Netanyahu in the letter, which was sent Wednesday. She said that meant Netanyahu could also not direct others to advance the plan.

The letter included an opinion by Baharav-miara’s

deputy, saying the overhaul would “benefit the prime minister in terms of the administra­tion of his trial.” It said the changes would allow the governing coalition to more easily advance legislatio­n that could assist Netanyahu.

The heads of the parties in Netanyahu’s government said they “reject outright” the attorney general’s stance, saying it was an attempt to thwart the legal changes.

Amir Fuchs, a senior researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank, said Baharav-miara’s position won’t affect the plan’s progress. He said the attorney general’s position is binding, meaning Netanyahu won’t be able to deal with the legal changes, and neither will any of his political appointees on his behalf. But ministers in his government should be able to, he said.

The judicial overhaul was launched by the country’s justice minister, a close confidante of Netanyahu’s, and the Israeli leader has touted it as the right step for the country.

Asked about moves to alter the judiciary by a leader on trial in an interview with CNN this week, Netanyahu said “none of the reforms that we’re talking about ... have anything to do with my trial.”

The plan would allow a simple majority of the country’s 120-seat parliament to overturn Supreme Court decisions that deem laws unconstitu­tional. It would grant the government more power over the appointmen­t of judges. And it would allow government ministers to ignore the advice of legal counselors and make the position less independen­t.

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