In Israel, the legislature is not sovereign to legislate, and the executive lacks actual control to execute the instructions of the legislature. The Supreme Court has seized the government’s power to determine policies.
By Dr. Aviel Sheyin-Stevens, INN
This maxim could serve attorneys well: Do not investigate what you cannot litigate. This is expedient in advanced democracies but hardly applicable in Israel, because Israel is a judicial despotism. The “rule of law” in Israel is no longer the dispassionate enforcement of duly promulgated laws, but has become the rule of unchecked lawyers and judges, which President Reuven Rivlin once referred to as the tyranny of the “rule of law mafia.”
In Israel, the legislature is not sovereign to legislate, and the executive lacks actual control to execute the instructions of the legislature. The Supreme Court has seized the government’s power to determine policies.
The dictum of Aharon Barak, President of the Supreme Court of Israel (1995-2006), that “everything is justiciable”, everything is liable to trial, makes nonsense of the rule of law, and Israel’s reputation as a democracy. The rules of law that Barak’s judicial opinions created have no counterpart in advanced democracies: a court can countermand military orders; decide “whether to prevent the release of a terrorist within the framework of a political ‘package deal’” and direct the government to move the security wall that keeps suicide bombers from entering Israel; that judges can only be removed by other judges; etc. This passes for the rule of law in Israel: arbitrary decrees by unelected officials.
Israel’s Basic Law: Knesset defines the Knesset as the sovereign. That is because the public elects its members in national elections. Members of Knesset in turn, elect the government as the executive arm of the people’s will. In democracies, the parliament legislates laws; the executive implements policies in accordance with the law and the mandate it receives from the voting public; the judicial branch interprets laws.
Since Barak’s dictum, the authority of the Knesset to promulgate laws has diminished. The justices of the Supreme Court and the attorney general seized legislative power by abrogating laws and interfering with the legislative process, and dictating laws through legal opinions and judgments. They also seized executive power by canceling government decisions, and asserting the power to dictate policies to the government.
Speaking at a conference in December 2018, Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit insisted that his legal opinions have the force of law and ministers are required to abide by them…that is despotism!
Speaking at a conference in December 2018, Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit insisted that his legal opinions have the force of law and ministers are required to abide by them. Given that Mandelblit has also asserted the power to cancel laws and reject the legitimacy of legislative initiatives he does not like, his statement indicated that he is essentially Israel’s sole legislator. Knesset laws can only be enforced if he agrees to enforce them. His decisions, on the other hand, are final. That is despotism!
Mandelblit attacked government ministers for advancing a bill to expel the families of terrorists from their homes. He stated: “The proposed law to expel families of terrorists inside the Territories is unconstitutional.” But Israel has no constitution.
He said the bill, “raises difficulties in the international arena.” But the attorney general has no proper diplomatic qualifications. The government is in a better position to judge Israel’s diplomatic interests than the attorney general.
Mandeblblit insisted: “The argument that my objection [to the proposed law] harms national security is devoid of all foundation.” But the unelected attorney general has no way of knowing that his assertion is true.
At a Knesset hearing in November 2018, Deputy Attorney-General Dina Zilber was asked to represent the position of the government regarding a controversial bill that would block state funding to artists and productions that campaign against Israel. Bereft of legal argumentation, Zilber viciously attacked the bill.
Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked responded to Zilber’s attack by informing Zilber’s boss, Mandelblit, that she would no longer permit Zilber to appear before Knesset committees or the government because of her abuse of her office, and unwillingness to follow the law, which requires her to represent faithfully the positions of the Justice Ministry.
Shaked’s position was grounded in Israeli law. Israel lacks a formal constitution, but its basic laws have over time received constitutional standing. As Basic Law: The Knesset makes clear, Justice Minister Shaked is fully empowered to block Zilber from representing her ministry. Instead of accepting that Shaked was operating in accordance with her constitutional authority as the minister responsible for his office, Mandelblit insisted that Zilber would continue to represent his office and the Justice Ministry before the Knesset, and anywhere else he wishes Zilber to go.
When the left-wing chairman of the Knesset’s Economic Affairs Committee, Eitan Cabel from the Zionist Union, summoned Zilber to present the Justice Ministry’s position on regulation of the dairy industry, Shaked received the summons.
Paragraph 21(B) of Basic Law: The Knesset empowers Knesset committees to summon a public official to appear before them, but the law stipulates, “the supervising minister may inform the committee that he will appear instead of the person who was summoned.”
Paragraph 123(A) of the Knesset’s rules provides committees with the power to summon a public servant, but it stipulates that the summons will be made “through the relevant minister and with his knowledge,” further clarifying the minister’s authority.
Acting in accordance with her lawful authority, Shaked informed Cabel that she would appear before his committee instead of Zilber. Mandelblit fomented a constitutional crisis, telling Zilber to appear before the committee despite Shaked’s lawful prohibition.
The Government Service Law bars public servants from openly opposing government-sponsored legislation. When MK Amir Ohana submitted a bill that would permit government ministers to have substantive power to choose their ministries’ legal advisors, passed through the Ministerial Committee on Legislation chaired by Shaked, Mandelblit openly opposed the law and participated in a public protest against it. In a letter leaked to the media, 22 legal advisors for government ministries urged Mandelblit to block the bill.
In 1993, the Supreme Court made the “Pinchasi” ruling: Government ministers must resign if the attorney general indicts them. Thus transforming the attorney general from the government’s legal advisor into the ultimate boss of elected leaders.
Recently, the unelected Mandelblit upended the 2019 election campaign by informing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he intended to indict him, based on criminal probes of dubious quality. This could impact Netanyahu’s ability to govern as Israeli voters should decide.
Netanyahu and the Likud could win in April, but would need to form a coalition with smaller parties. Likud’s right-wing coalition partners and religious parties have stated that they will join a coalition with Likud, regardless of Netanyahu’s indictment. Together, they could get less than 61 out of the 120 Knesset seats. Thus, to form a government, Netanyahu may need to bring in left-wing parties. Leaders of left-wing parties have intimated, however, that they will not join a coalition with an indicted Netanyahu.
Attorney-General Mandelblit undermines democracy by thwarting the public’s will to achieve its objectives through its elected representatives.
He undermines governance, because he could delay and stop processes, and prevent the government from functioning.
He undermines the accountability of the government, since he could preclude a governmental initiative but does not carry any responsibility for the minister’s failure to fulfill his or her office’s objectives.
He also undermines the right to a fair trial, because even the worst criminals deserves legal representation; whereas, there is no one to represent the public and its elected representatives when the attorney general presents his own position or presents the position of elected officials halfheartedly.
Law should govern a nation, as opposed to arbitrary decisions of officials. Since power tends to corrupt, democracies limit the powers of elected officials; subjecting them to stand for election on a regular basis. Voters can replace an elected official that fails to meet expectations. Power also corrupts appointed officials just as much as it corrupts elected ones; however, voters have no similar authority over unelected officials who fail them. The public did not appoint them, and they owe it no account for their behavior.
The Knesset should determine the matters that courts are empowered to consider, and the disputes that they have the authority to resolve. They should not be policy upon vital matters affecting the nation, such that by their nature should be decided by the political (legislative and executive) branches of the government: defense, foreign policy, immigration, governmental spending, public security, etc.
The Knesset should have the power to impeach the attorney general and despotic judges that are appropriating the powers of elected officials; overriding the decisions of the Knesset and the government. If Israel is to maintain its democracy, its elected officials must challenge the legal fraternity and restore to the Knesset the sole power to legislate laws.
In a democracy, key officials stand for election at relatively short intervals and thus are accountable to the people. A judiciary that freely overrides the decisions of those officials is anti-democratic and despotic. As Abraham Lincoln stated, “if the policy of the government upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court…the people will have ceased to be their own rulers.”
Ayelet Shaked started reforming the justice system by bringing in people with a broad range of views. In January 2019, her New Right party co-leader, Education Minister Naftali Bennett, while defending her from criticism over allegarions involving her ally in the Judicial Appointments Committee, said: “In recent days, powerful political forces on the left banded together to attack Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, since they identify her as the only one who had the courage to change the legal system after 40 years of judges appointed in a closed club, Ayelet Shaked arrived, and made changes with determination, courage and wisdom.” Bennett also said Shaked will continue in her postion for as long as it takes to complete the reform.
At a Bar Association seminar in January 2019, Shaked said the accusations were “false attacks and lies.” She rejected calls to step down, and said she would continue serving as Justice Minister after the April 2019 elections, for “four more years, until I complete the revolution I have started.”
May her triumphs be many.
Dr. Sheyin-Stevens is a Registered Patent Attorney based in Florida, USA. He earned his Doctorate in Law from the University of Miami.
Superb exposition. Israel was incepted with the law. Hear O Israel, no scripture gave the world more world acepted laws.
• To give the decision according to the majority, when there is a difference of opinion among the members of the Court as to matters of law (Ex. 23:2) (affirmative).
• Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil; neither shalt thou bear witness in a cause to turn aside after a multitude to pervert justice; (Ex. 23:2) (negative).
• “Do not side with the majority to do wrong.” [Exodus 23:2]
• “Not to hear one of the parties to a suit in the absence of the other party” [Ex. 23:1]
Brilliant and extremely timely article. Right on target.
The French political philosopher Montesquieu once said that only power can check power. Here we have a common development in Western political societies; namely, that un-elected people determine government policy. What to do?
What gives courts their power is the assumption that governments and legislatures will abide by their decisions. And what happens if they don’t?
We have an example in the comment made by the American President, Andrew Jackson. Responding to a decision of the US Supreme Court written by the then Chief Justice, John Marshall, Jackson said: ‘John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it’.
The government should simply pay no attention to what the judges say and get on with the job. There is nothing like a short, sharp rebuke to clear the judicial mind and put the judges in their place.
———- Forwarded message ———
From: David Chase
Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2019 at 4:38
In Israel it’s also become politically incorrect, or a separate tyranny of the rule of social norms. to have a sense of humor. It conflicts with too many of the current religious and political norms. To have a sense of humor is to expose yourself to potential ridicule and chronic feelings of loneliness. And lastly, because of it, any efforts of psychiatrists or therapists, is inherently doomed to failure, especially since they themselves suffer from the same malaise. Tell a therapist in Israel a joke and they’ll have you committed. Smile too much and they’ll think you’re up to something.