In first, all 15 Supreme Court justices to hear petitions against ‘reasonableness law’ curbing their power
All 15
justices of Israel’s Supreme Court will hear the petitions asking them to
cancel the “reasonableness law” that the Knesset passed last week, Supreme
Court President Esther Hayut announced on Monday.
The
hearing is scheduled for 10 a.m. on Sept. 12, three days before the start of
the High Holidays. The government will have to file its response to the
petitions 10 days earlier.
It
will be the first time in the court’s 75-year history that a panel of 15
justices will preside over a case.
On
July 24, all 64 lawmakers in the governing coalition voted into law a bill to
restrict judges’ use of the “reasonableness” standard. The amendment to Basic
Law: The Judiciary bars “reasonableness” as a justification for judges to
reverse decisions made by the Cabinet, ministers and “other elected officials
as set by law.”
NGOs
immediately filed petitions asking the Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court
of Justice, to strike down the law. While the court scheduled a hearing, it has
not gone as far as to issue an emergency injunction against the law, as several
of the seven petitioners had requested.
“We
are ready. We will appear at the Supreme Court to defend Israeli democracy and
do everything we can to stop the judicial coup,” the Movement for Quality
Government’s Chairman Eliad Shraga said last week. “We will continue to protest
and fight everywhere and from every podium until the threat is removed.”
Separate
from the petitions against the “reasonableness law,” opposition leader Yair
Lapid of the Yesh Atid Party asked the court to order Justice Minister Yariv Levin
to convene the Judicial Selection Committee, which is responsible for
appointing new judges to the courts. Lapid’s petition will also be heard after
the summer recess.
Defense
Minister Yoav Gallant has gone on the record as saying that the government
would accept the Supreme Court’s decisions. “Israel is a democratic,
law-abiding country. We’ll act according to the law,” Gallant told journalists
ahead of the weekly Cabinet meeting on Sunday.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that his government will seek an agreement
with the opposition on the rest of the judicial reform package during the
Knesset’s summer recess, which started on Sunday.
In an
interview with Fox News, the prime minister denied that the reform push was
weakening Israel’s democracy, as its opponents claim, stating that it was in
fact “strengthening democracy. We’re bringing it back in line to where most
democracies are. Where Israel was in its first five decades and where it should
be now in the coming decades.”
On
Sunday, Netanyahu’s Likud Party rejected a demand by the opposition to freeze
all judicial reform legislation until 2025. “Yair Lapid is ready to talk with
Abu Mazen [Palestinian Authority head Mahmoud Abbas] without preconditions, but
for Likud he is setting out a list of preconditions for talks,” the party said.
As usual Netanyahu is making unapplicable comparisons to weasel his position under false premises.
ReplyDeleteRequiring the condition of stopping the legal revolution to negotiate with the coalition and no conditions to start a dialogue with Abbas is justified by the fact that dialoguing with Abbas does not allow him to do anything he cannot do before, while no conditions dialogue with the coalition allows them to continue destroying the Israeli democracy while conducting make believe negotiations.