International Law Professor, and Kohelet Foundation Fellow, Eugene Kontorovich recently wrote an Op-Ed piece in the Wall Street Journal titled “Israel’s Supreme Court Claims a Veto on Political Appointments”.
The subtitle is “The intervention is a timely illustration of why the new government seeks to reform the tribunal.”
First, watch this video put out by the Kohelet Foundation, where Professor Kontorovich is a Fellow, to begin to understand how the judicial reform will strengthen Israel’s democracy:
<
>
Now take a moment to read though some of the factual points that Professor Kontorovich points out in his WSJ article:
The new government’s proposed judiciary reform has provoked pushback from the Biden administration and others on the ground that it threatens the rule of law. This case is a timely illustration that the opposite is true. No judiciary in the world has as far-reaching powers over government as Israel’s. The court assumed these powers in recent decades without authorization from lawmakers or a national consensus, and there is no reason they should be unalterable.
Judicial review—the ability of a court to declare that a law violates a country’s constitution—is an American invention. Israel doesn’t have a constitution. The court assumed that power in 1995, when it proclaimed that the Knesset had given it the power to strike down laws. The 1992 law under which the court claimed that authority passed 32-21. A majority of the 120-member Knesset didn’t show up to vote, not having known the court would later claim the law as a quasi-constitution.
This was only one step in the court’s power grab. It gradually eliminated all restrictions on justiciability and standing, allowing it to rule on any issues in public life whenever it chooses, without the constraint of lower-court proceedings or fact-finding. It employed the doctrine of “reasonableness” as a free-standing basis to block government action, including the government’s makeup. And the court has claimed authority to decide whether any new Basic Laws, or amendments to old ones, are valid, ending the charade that it is subordinate to law.
The reform proposals wouldn’t undermine judicial independence and would make the Israeli court more like its American counterpart. One measure would abolish the “reasonableness” and limit the court to blocking government action that violates the law, not its policy notions. Another would increase the Knesset’s involvement in judicial appointments but still comes far short of America’s purely political appointment process. The reform package would require expanded panels and a supermajority of the court to strike down legislation. In the U.S., Congress has regulated the jurisdiction and composition of judicial panels to raise the bar for striking down statutes.
I highly recommend each and every person read his full article (See Below) to better understand why the proposed judicial reform is extremely necessary to strengthen Israeli democracy, after 2+ decades of a process that has allowed the judicial branch to usurp powers from the executive and legislative branches of government.
While Israel’s political left and the establishment media are crying out that the proposed judicial reform will destroy Israel’s democracy, the exact opposite is true. It will save Israel’s democracy. The truth is that the political left has used this judicial power to stop all conservative, proudly Jewish policies meant to strengthen the Jewish state of Israel, and they are pulling out all the scare tactics to stop themselves from losing that undemocratic power. For consecutive right-wing governments, the Israeli voters vote right, and then complain that their representative governments act left. There is even a book called “Why Israelis Vote Right and Receive Left”. Finally, we have a government that wants to rebalance Israel’s democratic system so that voters will get what they vote for. The political left in Israel is going crazy fearing that will actually happen. Hence various sectors are threatening to strike like the hi-tech sector, the judicial sector, they are warning that it will harm Israel’s economy, Israel’s academic standing, and basically blackening Israel’s name on the world stage seeing all these headlines. Without doing anything, global investors and academics will follow through based on these headlines alone. Two global companies have already withdrawn their financial investments from Israel as a result of these scare tactics of the political left. It’s like if they do not get their way, and accept the rules of democracy, then the whole country can go down the tubes.
I wrote about some of the problems with Israel’s justice system destroying Israel’s democracy exactly 20 years ago. You can read it here (yes, I used to blog 20 years ago).
Many Israelis have been calling for necessary judicial reforms for close to 30 years, since Chief Justice Aharon Barak began his judicial coup over Israel’s government back in the mid-1990s.
Two years ago I interviewed Simcha Rothman about the Israeli justice system and why changes needed to be made to strengthen Israel’s democracy.
Today, Simcha is an MK in the Knesset and the Head of the extremely important Knesset Consitution, Justice & Law committee. He is working together with Minister of Justice Yair Levin on the proposed Judicial reform, which much of the establishment press, together with the political left, are bashing as anti-democratic.
Do not miss this video to truly understand the reality of the justice system ignored by the media, and hear why the proposed judicial reform is necessary. It has been a reform that many of us have been talking about for more than 20 years.
For those interested in the audio version or in listening to our long-form interviews at a quicker speed, then best to use one of the podcast services:
Israel’s Supreme Court Claims a Veto on Political Appointments
The intervention is a timely illustration of why the new government seeks to reform the tribunal.
>
Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with Aryeh Deri in Jerusalem, Jan. 8.PHOTO: RONEN ZVULUN/PRESS POOL
Listen to article
Length(6 minutes)
Israel’s Supreme Court last week invalidated the ministerial appointment of Aryeh Deri, leader of one party in the new governing coalition. The ruling didn’t even pretend to be interpreting Israel’s Basic Laws, which lay out the basic structure of government. The Knesset had specifically passed a law authorizing someone in Mr. Deri’s situation (he had pleaded guilty to criminal charges) to hold cabinet office. But the court said it would be “unreasonable” for Mr. Deri to be a minister.
In other words, it canceled the prime minister’s appointment of a cabinet member on grounds that it was technically legal, but gross—a kind of impeachment by judiciary.
The new government’s proposed judiciary reform has provoked pushback from the Biden administration and others on the ground that it threatens the rule of law. This case is a timely illustration that the opposite is true. No judiciary in the world has as far-reaching powers over government as Israel’s. The court assumed these powers in recent decades without authorization from lawmakers or a national consensus, and there is no reason they should be unalterable.
Judicial review—the ability of a court to declare that a law violates a country’s constitution—is an American invention. Israel doesn’t have a constitution. The court assumed that power in 1995, when it proclaimed that the Knesset had given it the power to strike down laws. The 1992 law under which the court claimed that authority passed 32-21. A majority of the 120-member Knesset didn’t show up to vote, not having known the court would later claim the law as a quasi-constitution.
This was only one step in the court’s power grab. It gradually eliminated all restrictions on justiciability and standing, allowing it to rule on any issues in public life whenever it chooses, without the constraint of lower-court proceedings or fact-finding. It employed the doctrine of “reasonableness” as a free-standing basis to block government action, including the government’s makeup. And the court has claimed authority to decide whether any new Basic Laws, or amendments to old ones, are valid, ending the charade that it is subordinate to law.
The reform proposals wouldn’t undermine judicial independence and would make the Israeli court more like its American counterpart. One measure would abolish the “reasonableness” and limit the court to blocking government action that violates the law, not its policy notions. Another would increase the Knesset’s involvement in judicial appointments but still comes far short of America’s purely political appointment process. The reform package would require expanded panels and a supermajority of the court to strike down legislation. In the U.S., Congress has regulated the jurisdiction and composition of judicial panels to raise the bar for striking down statutes.
The most controversial proposal would allow the Knesset, by a 61-vote majority, to suspend a Supreme Court nullification of a statute. A similar procedure exists in Canada, and in Israel under one basic law. The override seems odd to Americans because Congress is bound by the Supreme Court’s constitutional interpretations. But Congress is free to change a statute if it disagrees with the court’s interpretation, and Israel’s Supreme Court is interpreting statutes. When federal courts strike down laws under the U.S. Constitution, as Chief Justice John Marshall put it, they uphold the “supreme will” of the people—embodied in the supermajority required for the Constitution’s adoption—against momentary departures from it. Israel’s court, lacking a supermajoritarian constitution, doesn’t have such a justification. Why should a law passed with 32 Knesset votes trump one passed with 61?
The proposed override clause would be less effective than its proponents and critics think. It won’t stop the Supreme Court overreach—it will encourage it. Israel’s Supreme Court hears roughly 10,000 petitions a year and can swamp the Knesset with its rulings, while override bills would go through the cumbersome legislative process. And the Knesset faces the unique check of extraordinary international pressure: Each potential override will be a diplomatic incident.
Critics of the judicial reform argue that while U.S. lawmaking involves two chambers and two branches of government, the court is the only check on the unicameral Knesset. But much of the time the legislative and executive branches of U.S. government are controlled by the same party and act in lockstep. Moreover, the Knesset has a major check the court lacks: elections, which happen roughly every 2½ years. Arguments against reform that invoke the U.S. separation of powers actually demonstrate the need for change: The Supreme Court is all checks, no balances.
Others claim the current power of Israel’s high court is necessary to protect minority rights. This is a red herring. The court’s most notorious decisions, like the Deri case, are about structural issues. If Israel wasn’t a dictatorship of the majority before the court claimed these powers in 1995, it won’t become one now.
Those still troubled should be reassured that the reforms can be immediately reversed by a new government, further refuting claims that they would constitute an end to democracy. The reformers understand that their government shouldn’t have the last word on the structure of the political system. Their opponents, on the other hand, seem to believe that a system created by a small elite is unalterable holy writ.
Mr. Kontorovich is a professor at George Mason University’s Scalia Law School and a scholar at the Kohelet Policy Forum in Jerusalem.
From Mort Klein & Elizabeth Berney of ZOA:
Israeli Judicial Reforms Are Good for Democracy and Rule of Law
This interview with Rothman remain the best explanation capturing the very real reason why the Right must not surrender to their adversaries on the Left. The Left’s control over the court is not a battle of ideological differences between the Right and the Left, it is a battle of whether the control over the country will be held by an elitist consortium of power brokers dressed in black or whether that control should reside closer to the will and interest of those who are being ruled over. This is not a battle which will easily be won, but it is also a battle which should not be easily surrendered either.
Excellent interview between Rothman and Avi. I found Rothman’s assertion that he is not advocating for conservatism to be very well explained. He goes on to explain that there is no conservationism in Israel’s court system, and that it is his goal to actually introduce such a thing into the system. A very interesting discussion which I highly recommend.
I find this Subject very important and interesting. However, if I have to Donate in order to see if the Film was worth my time or not then YOU CAN STUFF IT!
I find this Subject very important and interesting. However, if I have to Donaueschingen in order to see if the Film was worth my time or not then YOU CAN STUFF IT!