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Who will have the final say: the Supreme Court or the Knesset?

Where this goes from here is far from clear - and it is still possible President Isaac Herzog’s compromise track will yield fruit

September 14, 2023 10:24
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3 min read

Another historic week in Israel political history as, for the first time ever, all 15 members of the High Court of Justices convened in Jerusalem.

In a marathon session lasting more than 13 hours, they listened to petitions against the amendment to ‘Basic Law: The Judiciary’, that cancels the court’s ability to use reasonability as grounds for striking down decisions and appointments made by the cabinet and the prime minister.

Since the judicial reform agenda was introduced nine months ago, and for all its grand designs, so far cancelling reasonability is the only legal reform to actually be passed into law.

It’s worth recalling that early in the life of this government (Benjamin Netanyahu’s sixth) the court overruled the appointment of Shas leader Aryeh Deri and banned him from serving as a minister on the grounds that having reneged on his plea bargain his appointment was “extremely unreasonable”.

This catalyst spurred MK Simcha Rothman, chairman of the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, to advance cancellation of the court’s use of reasonability. One of the arguments the petitioners deployed is that Rothman did not follow conventional procedure. This law was originally introduced to the committee as Rothman’s private member’s bill and fast-tracked by him, circumventing a more conventional path.

Another argument is that in the lead-up to the vote the prime minister did not honour the IDF chief of staff’s request to brief him on the security ramifications of passing the bill.

This relates to concern over unity among the ranks but also touches on the threat that a weakening of the judiciary could expose IDF veterans to international tribunals. So critics will argue it was ill-conceived and did not take into consideration a broad enough examination of the repercussions.

It is precisely because so much of this government’s behaviour appears unreasonable that the (dry and technical issue) of reasonability resonates so strongly.