Netanyahu's religious-nationalist coalition says the bill, which
parliament is scheduled to vote on by Monday, is needed to
balance out the branches of power because the Court has become
too interventionist.
Critics say it has a crucial role in safeguarding civil rights,
in a country that has no constitution and a unicameral
parliament dominated by the government.
Carrying blue and white Israeli flags, a column of protesters
several kilometres (miles) long marched up the main highway to
Jerusalem under a scorching summer sun, to the sounds of beating
drums and anti-government chants and cheers.
The marchers have been walking for days, camping out overnight
and often met by local residents offering food and drink.
They plan to rally outside parliament ahead of a Sunday debate
and subsequent vote on the bill, which would limit the Supreme
Court's powers to void what it considers "unreasonable"
government or ministerial decisions.
Protest leader Shikma Bressler, asked if she thought the
marchers would manage to stop the vote, said she didn't know.
"But the vote is not the last step," she told Reuters. "This is
why we are trying to build the forces ...in this country to
choose right from wrong, to choose light from darkness."
The bill, its supporters say, is designed to facilitate
effective governance with courts still keeping ample judicial
oversight. Opponents say the change is being rushed through
parliament and will open the door to corruption and abuses of
power.
Polls suggest widespread misgivings among Israelis as the
planned changes have dented the economy and worried key ally
Washington, which has urged Netanyahu - who is on trial on
corruption charges that he denies - to seek consensus on
judicial reforms.
The crisis has even sown divisions within the military, long
viewed as an apolitical melting pot for a fractious society,
with concerns about war-readiness voiced on both sides of the
debate.
(Writing by Maayan Lubell; editing by John Stonestreet)
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