Top Israeli court weighs in on Netanyahu's judicial overhaul
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[August 03, 2023]
By Maayan Lubell
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel's Supreme Court began hearing on Thursday
the first in a series of appeals against a judicial overhaul being
unfurled by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his
religious-nationalist coalition, which has set off an unprecedented
domestic crisis.
A March amendment to a quasi-constitutional "basic law" limited
conditions under which a prime minister can be deemed unfit, or
incapacitated, and removed from office. The appellants - backed by
Netanyahu's own attorney-general - want that voided.
The case being heard by three justices pits the Supreme Court against
the Knesset, or parliament, situated shouting-distance away across a
rose garden on a gentle Jerusalem hill.
"Clash Among Branches of Government - The First Test," read the main
headline of the mass-circulation daily Israel Hayom.
Supporters of Netanyahu, who bounded back to a record sixth term in late
December, cast Thursday's appeal - and others slated for next month - as
a reminder of what they deem meddling by unelected judges in the
democratic mandate of the coalition.
Critics see the Supreme Court as the last check on an executive working
in lock-step with the legislature in a country that has no formal
constitution.
That Netanyahu is on trial in three graft cases has further fuelled
worries at home and abroad for Israel's democratic health. He denies any
wrongdoing and has cast the criminal charges against him as a
politicised witch-hunt.
"There's a desire here to create a judicial dictatorship," Foreign
Minister Eli Cohen told public broadcaster Kan.
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An aerial view shows protesters
demonstrating against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
his nationalist coalition government's judicial overhaul, in Tel
Aviv, Israel July 29, 2023. REUTERS/Yair Palti
The appellant Movement for Quality Government in Israel argues that
the March law "constituted another transition toward dictatorship"
and "set a dangerous new precedent (whereby) the person possessing
the premiership can change constitutional arrangements as convenient
given the majority he has to hand".
On Sept. 12, for the first time in Israel, the entire 15-justice
bench will convene to hear an appeal against another basic law
amendment - this one curbing Supreme Court powers.
The legislation, ratified on July 24, removed the "reasonableness"
standard of review which was among the court's tools to overrule
government decisions. Critics of that amendment worry that it will
encourage high-level corruption.
Both the incapacity and reasonableness amendments are part of basic
laws that the court so far has refrained from quashing. Netanyahu
has voiced hope that it will not do so now, and has been hazy on
whether he would abide by any such ruling.
(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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