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Broken Bibi is powerless as Israel tears itself apart

Part of the judicial reform bill passed into law this week, but the prime minister has never looked more beleaguered

July 27, 2023 11:00
Benjamin Netanyahu with Yoav Gallant and Yariv Levin
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and minister of Defense Yoav Galant attend a vote on the reasonableness bill at the assembly hall of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem on July 24, 2023. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** כנסת מליאה נאום הצבעה יריב לוין חוק יסוד השפיטה הצבעה קריאה ראשונה יואב גלנט ראש הממשלה בנימין נתניהו ביבי
5 min read

The most revealing photograph of the week in Israel showed Defence Minister Yoav Gallant and Justice Minister Yariv Levin locked in angry argument just before the third reading of the bill to eliminate the “Reasonableness Standard”, the law at the heart of the protests that rocked the country.

Between them sits a silent, sad-looking prime minister.

It may yet come to be seen as a defining image, one that captured the twilight of Benjamin Netanyahu’s long political career.

One Likud MK admitted that it was “an awful picture”. He said: “Bibi should have never allowed the argument to take place in the open, with the entire nation watching on television. Yariv and Yoav should have worked things out in advance. They are all to blame.”

From next week, none of the three will have to go back to the Knesset for two-and-a-half months, unless there’s an emergency session. But none have much of a summer holiday to look forward to.

Levin, who emerged victorious from this round — the law he backed passed, despite the last-minute delaying efforts by the two men sitting beside him — is planning the next round of legislation. Anxiously counting up the coalition MKs, he still hopes they will continue supporting his “legal reform”, which aims to limit the power of the judiciary.

Levin knows that it will be much harder to muster a majority for the next round. Gallant is not the only one counselling caution. In recent days, the strictly-Orthodox parties have all published calls to reconsider the rest of the legislation.

Netanyahu, when he’s not receiving reports on the international financial institutions threatening to downgrade Israel’s economy, will be engaged in frustrating talks with the White House, in the hope of finally getting some face-time with President Joe Biden.

Even if he doesn’t get an actual invitation to Washington, he hopes — at least — for a meeting on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly. He will be kept waiting for an answer and may even cancel his trip to New York, rather than be humiliated.

All that comes after he underwent emergency surgery to fit a pacemaker last weekend, amid a belated admission from his doctors that he has been suffering cardiac irregularities for years now.