Torn between protests and judicial reforms, Israel seeks a way forward

On July 24, Knesset legislators approved the first Bill in a package of upcoming judicial reforms, nullifying the ‘reasonability’ clause in a 64-0 vote, after the 56 members of the Opposition boycotted the vote. Leading up to the vote, protests reached a boiling point outside the Knesset, as protest leaders declared that they had blocked all entrances to the Parliament compound and wouldn’t allow the vote, a claim immediately denied by the Israel Police.

The reasonability clause was legal terminology introduced in its current form to the Israeli Supreme Court by Justice Aharon Barak to strike down administrative decisions deemed beyond the pale in terms of reasonable judgement, even if they did not contradict any written letter of law. A parallel legal clause exists in England and Singapore.

Also read: Explained | Why has Israel paused the judicial reform plan? 

Critics deemed this an aggravated judicial overreach, as judges could thus declare Ministers incapable of decision-making. Two noted critics, Justice Noam Solberg and Justice Alex Stein, currently sit on the Supreme Court. Most of the legal establishment uncompromisingly rejects the legal reform proposals in their current form.

After voting, Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich issued a statement denouncing the protesters: “This was a violent siege on the Knesset, an attempt to prevent Members of Knesset (MK) from fulfilling their legal right and duty to vote. This was not an expression of democracy; it was our moment of storming Capitol Hill… The Left is not democratic for a long time now, and the Right is attempting to restore democracy to Israel.”

After the Bill passed, more angry protesters took to the streets, blocking causeways in Tel Aviv and central junctions countrywide.

In Kfar Saba, an angry driver accelerated and ploughed through a group of protesters that was blocking his route, injuring three. In another viral video, a young mother shouted at protesters blocking her car. Moments later, they had shattered her back windshield over her three little children in the backseat.

At night, Israel Medical Association declared a doctor’s strike for the next day, citing concerns of political intervention in their work. Labour Court dismissed the concerns as theoretical and issued an order to promptly end the strike. Israel’s labour laws stipulate that workers are required to provide a two-week notice prior to exercising their right to strike. The strike, which begun in the morning and stretched on for seven hours, left patients — who had major medical procedures postponed indefinitely after waiting in queue for months — reportedly furious.

All major newspapers featured a black front page on Tuesday morning. The small print stated that it was an ad paid for by hi-tech industry leaders.

The hardest blow landed with the evening, as Moody’s Investors Services issued a special report downgrading Israel’s economic forecast from Positive to Stable, citing the reforms as a sign that “Israel’s governance has deteriorated”. Concerns included risk of a constitutional crisis between the executive and judiciary, and possible security risks due to threats from pilots to stop reporting for training.

Game of cat and mouse

Dr. Yehudah Yifrah, legal correspondent at the Makor Rishon weekly, pointed out that the Bill passed on Monday will probably have no effect on the Supreme Court. In a recent verdict, Chief Justice Esther Hayut invoked the “Test of Narrow Proportionality” in a manner identical to Reasonability. In short, the game of cat and mouse between the judiciary and the executive will continue unhindered.

The reason the government began legislating the sweeping reforms with the reasonability clause is because it was deemed negligible. — Chief Justice Barak is on record saying, in an interview with Mr. Yifrah from 2019, that he saw no problem in modifying it. Opposition leader MK Yair Lapid had stated the same from the Knesset podium. However, both voiced uncompromising opposition to any reforms.

Justice Minister Yariv Levin and MK Simha Rothman introduced the reform proposals after the January elections. Both have been writing with strong conviction against ever-increasing judicial overreach since its historical moment of conception when, in 1992, Chief Justice Barak declared his “constitutional revolution”, implying that Israel had a judiciable constitution even if no official constitution was ever drafted.

Mr. Levin’s reforms were drafted in cooperation with the Kohelet Policy Forum, whose mission statement supports “individual liberty and free-markets, [and] Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people and representative democracy”.

Another faction supports reforms out of personal or communal interest. These are the ultra-Orthodox, who view the Supreme Court as a bastion of militant secularism dedicated to destroying their lifestyle. Their immediate concern was the court’s prolonged effort to annul their exemption from mandatory conscription. Equally conspicuous are individuals like MK David Amsalem, whose priority is to unshackle legal constraints on extensive cronyism in senior public office.

Support for protests

Anti-reform leadership is personified by Shikma Bressler, a particle physicist and member of the ‘Black Flags’ political activists who organised attempts to topple PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s 2020 government. When the reforms appeared, her movement rebranded itself with a dramatic escalation in rhetoric. She tweets regularly about mass no-show ultimatums among fighter pilots and elite tech units, claims which Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesmen say are false. The protests do enjoy widespread support from multiple sectors in Israel. Numerous former security establishment leaders, as well as a majority of the economic and academic establishment, have thrown their weight behind the cause.

Ms. Bressler’s cohorts are powerful elites who view themselves as high performers supporting the backward, unproductive sectors who support the Netanyahu government. Mr. Netanyahu’s voters see them as an extractive elite running an unaccountable deep state. They point to the fact that no anti-reform protester has been prosecuted as proof that they are held to be above the law.

Protests escalated rapidly, blocking major traffic arteries, train tracks and, briefly, even Israel’s only international airport. Slogans decried the “End of Democracy” and “Dictatorship”, and weekly “Disruption Day” protests swept up mainstream leftists who genuinely believe that the Supreme Court is the last line of defence for civil liberties they hold dear.

‘No compromise’

Some, like Ms. Bressler, are ardent secularists for whom the court embodies a civil religion. Their choice slogans warn of theocracy. And compromise is considered blasphemy. This mindset is one reason that high-profile attempts at compromise have failed, as opposition parliamentarians can’t be seen as negotiating catastrophe.

The passionate demonstrators firmly believe their efforts will see their names being etched in the annals of history as the saviours of Israeli democracy. However, many disagree with the protest’s ends and means.

Assaf Malach is a political philosopher organising academics who support the reforms. This led to a public feud with a leading Israeli sociologist declaring that Mr. Malach was “no longer my brother but my enemy”.

As the Bill passed, Mr. Malach posted on Facebook about his dissolution with protesters: “The Left is in state of aggressive, violent psychosis… Endangering the IDF and national defence for reasons not remotely connected to any doctrine of conscientious objection on the Left or Right… Doctors abandoning patients… People knowingly and intentionally harming the Israeli economy… Any legitimate fears can’t justify this anti-democratic behaviour… Their claims are primarily a rationalisation of anguish over their historical loss of control of selected bastions of power and losing the elections.”

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Netanyahu faces mounting security challenges as violence spirals in West Bank

Benjamin Netanyahu and his loyalists released a brief cry of victory on June 22 morning as the judges at Jerusalem’s District Court told the prosecution that it “would be difficult” to prove allegations of bribery against the Prime Minister in one of the central cases currently deliberated, commonly known as Case 4000. This was seen by Mr. Netanyahu’s team as proof that charges were trumped up.


EDITORIAL | Spiralling violence: On the West Bank

But the next day, Israeli Attorney General and Chief Prosecutor, Gali Baharav-Myara, stated that prosecution will continue, nevertheless. Adv. Boaz Ben-Tzur, head of Mr. Netanyahu’s legal team, called the decision “haphazard and outrageous”.

Military escalation

But the legal challenges Mr. Netanyahu is dealing with have been dwarfed by the mounting security and political challenges his administration is facing. The incidents of the last week left behind a trail of attacks and armed clashed of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) with Palestinian gunmen, and later with radical settler groups, which included military escalation not witnessed since the second Intifada, 20 years ago.

The crisis broke out on early Monday morning (June 19), when IDF special forces entered Burkin and the Jenin Refugee Camp to arrest two affiliates of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), who had allegedly been involved in planning recent shooting attacks on Israelis. On their way out of the camp, Palestinians detonated an IED which incapacitated several of the armored personnel carriers, wounding seven soldiers. The IDF top brass views the incident as particularly worrisome, as it shows footprints of Iranian military training and tactics used by their proxies such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

As the convoy called in for rescue, a fierce gunbattle developed, which raged on for 11 hours. The IDF scrambled two Apache attack helicopters to secure the evacuation, in what was the first time the Israeli Air Force fought in the territories since the second Intifada of 2000-2005.

File picture of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
| Photo Credit:
via Reuters

At the end of the battle, over 30 Palestinians were wounded and seven dead, including a 15-year-old boy, Ahmed Sakr, and 15-year-old girl, Sedil Naghaghiya.

The UN Relief and Work Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) issued a statement saying that it “deplores the death by live ammunition of two Palestinian refugee children”. Israeli leadership rejected the accusations, saying as all the dead, including the young boy, were identified by Hamas and the PIJ as their own. Even Naghaghiya’s body was wrapped in PIJ flag for her funeral procession.

Attack in Eli

But violence didn’t end there. On Tuesday afternoon (June 20), two Hamas gunmen entered a gas station adjacent to the settlement of Eli and opened fire on diners at the Hummus Eliyahu restaurant, killing four Israelis: Nahman Mordoff (17), Elisha Anteman (18), Harel Masood (21), and 63-year-old Ofer Fayerman, and injuring three others.

The gunmen, identified as Muhanad Shehada and Khaled Sabah, from the village of Urif, members of Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades, were killed — one on the spot, by an armed settler, and the other by IDF forces, after a chase.

Settler violence

This led to a violent raid of Palestinian villages by radical settler youth, colloquially known as “Hilltop Youth”, primarily from the settlement of Yitzhar. They entered the villages of Turmus Ayya, Huwara and Luban al-Sharkiya, setting fire to fields, about 50 cars, and 30 houses. As the IDF moved in to restore law and order, clashes ensued with Palestinians, reportedly resulting in the death of a 27-year-old man in Turmus Ayya.

The next night, an IDF drone shot missiles at a car from which armed militants had opened fire at the Jalma border crossing, killing two militants from the PIJ and one from the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO). IDF spokesman said they had been responsible for multiple shooting attacks.

Adding another layer to Mr. Netanyahu’s mound of worries, the focus of international media and governments was on the attacks on Palestinian property by the Hilltop Youth, not on the Palestinian violence. This is a new phenomenon that many accredit to the tacit approval of radicals in Mr. Netanyahu’s government, with fingers being pointed at Finance Minister, Betzazel Smotrich, who also holds responsibilities in the Ministry of Defense, and at Internal Security Minister, Itamar Ben Gvir, who possesses a long record of radical activism from before he entered Parliament.

On Friday, a delegation of 18 EU ambassadors came to Turmus Ayya to express their solidarity. None of them visited the settlement of Eli, which they view as illegal. U.S. State Department Spokesman, Vedant Patel, also released a harsh condemnation, demanding Israel prosecute the rioters and compensate for damages to property.

On Sunday, Kan Reshet Bet public radio reported that U.S. administration officials announced they would reverse Trump era policy and restrict all scientific and technological collaborations over the 1967 Green Line, in the territories claimed by Israel. While this was a calculated blow aimed at Mr. Netanyahu’s government, it also painted roughly half a million Israeli settlers as violent extremists.

Mutual prosperity

This reporter met Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, the rabbi of the Har Bracha settlement, a settler leader, leading author of religious literature, and noted critic of settler violence. His settlement is across the valley from Yitzhar, where the most avid supporters of revenge attacks live.

He made it unequivocally clear that he opposes any infringement on Palestinian human rights, and believes in coexistence and mutual prosperity, despite his Palestinian neighbors’ radical Islamic beliefs. When asked about Yitzhar, he opposed their actions, but his rhetoric remained reserved.

But another senior figure in Har Bracha was furious and wanted to set the score straight on what settlers think of the Hilltop Youth. “They are enemies of the settlers. I risk my life daily riding on the highway via Huwara. I rode through there one hour before the Feb. 23 murder of Hillel and Yagel Yaniv, and again the following day.” 

“These young brats think they are great heroes going on their wanton vandalism. The only thing they accomplish is having the whole world portray us not as victims of terror, but as savages. They are an insult to everything we stand for: our religion, our personal sacrifices, and our prayers for peaceful coexistence despite everything we endure,” said the person.

Yeshaya Rosenman is the head of the South Asia Project at Sharaka NGO, Tel Aviv

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Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu fires Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for urging halt to overhaul

Prime Minister Benjamin Mr. Netanyahu abruptly fired his Defence Minister on March 26, a day after he called on the Israeli leader to halt a planned judicial overhaul that has fiercely divided the country and prompted growing discontent within the ranks of the military. Tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets of Tel Aviv, blocking a main highway, following the announcement.

The dismissal signalled that Mr. Netanyahu will move ahead this week with the overhaul plan, which has sparked mass protests, angered military and business leaders and raised concerns among Israel’s allies. Defence Minister Yoav Gallant had been the first senior member of the ruling Likud party to speak out against the plan.

In a brief statement, Mr. Netanyahu’s office said the Prime Minister had dismissed Mr. Gallant. Mr. Netanyahu later tweeted “we must all stand strong against refusal”.

Tens of thousands of Israelis poured into the streets in protest after Mr. Netanyahu’s announcement, blocking Tel Aviv’s main artery, transforming the Ayalon highway into a sea of blue-and-white Israeli flags and lighting a large bonfire in the middle of the road. Demonstrations took place in Beersheba, Haifa and Jerusalem, where thousands of people gathered outside Mr. Netanyahu’s private residence.

The decision came less than a day after Mr. Gallant, a former senior general, called for a pause in the controversial legislation until after next month’s Independence Day holidays, citing the turmoil in the ranks of the military over the plan.

Mr. Gallant had voiced concerns that the divisions in society were hurting morale in the military and emboldening Israel’s enemies across the region. “I see how the source of our strength is being eroded,” Mr. Gallant said.

While several other Likud members had indicated they might follow Mr. Gallant, the party quickly closed ranks on Sunday, clearing the way for his dismissal.

Galit Distal Atbaryan, Mr. Netanyahu’s Public Diplomacy Minister, said that Mr. Netanyahu summoned Mr. Gallant to his office and told him “that he doesn’t have any faith in him anymore and therefore he is fired.”

Mr. Gallant tweeted shortly after the announcement that “the security of the state of Israel always was and will always remain my life mission.”

Opposition leader Yair Lapid said that Mr. Gallant’s dismissal “harms national security and ignores warnings of all Defence officials.”

“The Prime Minister of Israel is a threat to the security of the state of Israel,” Mr. Lapid wrote on Twitter.

Avi Dichter, a former chief of the Shin Bet security agency, is expected to replace him. Mr. Dichter had reportedly flirted with joining Mr. Gallant but instead announced on Sunday he was backing the Prime Minister.

Mr. Netanyahu’s government is pushing ahead for a parliamentary vote this week on a centerpiece of the overhaul — a law that would give the governing coalition the final say over all judicial appointments. It also seeks to pass laws that would grant parliament the authority to override Supreme Court decisions with a basic majority and limit judicial review of laws.

Mr. Netanyahu and his allies say the plan will restore a balance between the judicial and executive branches and rein in what they see as an interventionist court with liberal sympathies.

But critics say the constellation of laws will remove the checks and balances in Israel’s democratic system and concentrate power in the hands of the governing coalition. They also say that Mr. Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption charges, has a conflict of interest.

Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets over the past three months to demonstrate against the plan in the largest demonstrations in the country’s 75-year history.

Leaders of Israel’s vibrant high-tech industry have said the changes will scare away investors, former top security officials have spoken out against the plan and key allies, including the United States and Germany, have voiced concerns.

In recent weeks discontent has even surged from within Israel’s Army – the most popular and respected institution among Israel’s Jewish majority. A growing number of Israeli reservists, including fighter pilots, have threatened to withdraw from voluntary duty in the past weeks.

Israel’s military is facing a surge in fighting in the occupied West Bank, threats from Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group and concerns that archenemy Iran is close to developing a nuclear-weapons capability.

Violence both in Israel and the occupied West Bank has escalated over the past few weeks to heights unseen in years.

Manuel Trajtenberg, head of an influential Israeli think tank, the Institute for National Security Studies, said that “Netanyahu can dismiss his Defence Minister, he cannot dismiss the warnings he heard from Gallant.”

Meanwhile, an Israeli good governance group on Sunday asked the country’s Supreme Court to punish Mr. Netanyahu for allegedly violating a conflict of interest agreement meant to prevent him from dealing with the country’s judiciary while he is on trial for corruption.

The Movement for Quality Government in Israel, a fierce opponent of the overhaul, asked the court to force Mr. Netanyahu to obey the law and sanction him either with a fine or prison time for not doing so. It said he was not above the law.

“A Prime Minister who doesn’t obey the court and the provisions of the law is privileged and an anarchist,” said Eliad Shraga, the head of the group, echoing language used by Mr. Netanyahu and his allies against protesters opposed to the overhaul. “The Prime Minister will be forced to bow his head before the law and comply with the provisions of the law.”

The Prime Minister responded saying the appeal should be dismissed and said that the Supreme Court didn’t have grounds to intervene.

Mr. Netanyahu is barred by the country’s Attorney General from directly dealing with his government’s plan to overhaul the judiciary, based on a conflict of interest agreement he is bound to, and which the Supreme Court acknowledged in a ruling over Mr. Netanyahu’s fitness to serve while on trial for corruption. Instead, Justice Minister Yariv Levin, a close confidant of Mr. Netanyahu, is spearheading the overhaul.

But on Thursday, after Parliament passed a law making it harder to remove a sitting Prime Minister, Mr. Netanyahu said he was unshackled from the attorney general’s decision and vowed to wade into the crisis and “mend the rift” in the nation. That declaration prompted the Attorney General, Gali Baharav-Miara, to warn that Mr. Netanyahu was breaking his conflict of interest agreement by entering the fray.

The fast-paced legal and political developments have catapulted Israel into uncharted territory and toward a burgeoning constitutional crisis, said Guy Lurie, a research fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank.

“We are at the start of a constitutional crisis in the sense that there is a disagreement over the source of authority and legitimacy of different governing bodies,” he said.

Mr. Netanyahu is on trial for charges of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in three separate affairs involving wealthy associates and powerful media moguls. He denies wrongdoing and dismisses critics who say he will try to seek an escape route from the charges through the legal overhaul.

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