Current:Home > FinanceThousands rally in support of Israel’s judicial overhaul before a major court hearing next week -WealthDrive Solutions
Thousands rally in support of Israel’s judicial overhaul before a major court hearing next week
View
Date:2025-04-16 19:31:44
JERUSALEM (AP) — Several thousand protesters supporting the Israeli government’s judicial overhaul rallied in front of the Supreme Court in Jerusalem on Thursday, before a pivotal hearing next week on the legality of the first major bill of the overhaul.
The bill, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right coalition passed in July, bans the Supreme Court from striking down government decisions it deems unreasonable.
With leading politicians signaling they won’t respect a court decision striking down the law, the stage could be set for a constitutional crisis. The hearing is set for Tuesday, though a ruling is likely months away.
The pro-overhaul crowd Thursday was overwhelmingly religious, many of them working class Jews of Mizrahi, or Middle Eastern, descent. Others came in from West Bank settlements.
Mizrahi Jews tend to be poorer and some have expressed hostility toward what they say is an elitist class of Ashkenazi, or European, Jews. Brandishing signs with the words “end the judicial dictatorship” and “the elites are taking control,” protesters said the overhaul was necessary to rein in the power of unelected justices.
“The Supreme Court is on the way to becoming the dictator of Israel,” protester Avram Farber said. “It’s trying to push for making the Israeli government — that enjoys a majority in the parliament — to be illegitimate.”
Opponents of the overhaul, who come largely from the country’s secular middle class, see the plan as a power-grab by Netanyahu’s government that will weaken the country’s checks and balances. They fear that by limiting the power of the court, Netanyahu and his ultranationalist allies are pushing the country toward autocratic rule. Their grassroots protest movement, the largest in Israel’s history, is now nearing its ninth month.
For the first time in Israeli history, all 15 justices of the Supreme Court will hear Tuesday’s case.
The court will rule on the legality of a bill that weakens its ability to act as a check on the ruling coalition, headed by the prime minister. The bill bars the court from striking down parliamentary decisions on the basis that they aren’t “reasonable.”
The justices have used the standard in the past to nullify government decisions that they view as unsound or corrupt.
This year, for instance, the court struck down the appointment of a Cabinet minister because of prior convictions for accepting bribes and tax offenses.
The government says the reasonability standard is anti-democratic, because it allows judges to override the decisions of an elected parliamentary majority.
A poll by the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank, found that just 14% of the Israeli public supports the legislation, while roughly 60% oppose it. The survey, conducted earlier this year, questioned 3,077 Israeli adults and had a margin of error of 1.8 percentage points.
If the justices strike down the law, the stage may be set for a constitutional crisis. The parliamentary speaker, Amir Ohana, hinted this week that he wouldn’t accept the court’s ruling, saying he wouldn’t allow the Knesset to be “trampled.” Netanyahu hasn’t publicly committed to following the ruling of the court, but posted Ohana’s comments to social media on Thursday.
The hearing set for Tuesday is the first of three overhaul cases on the court’s docket this month.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Erdoganomics
- This Program is Blazing a Trail for Women in Wildland Firefighting
- 'What the duck' no more: Apple will stop autocorrecting your favorite swear word
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Drugmaker Mallinckrodt may renege on $1.7 billion opioid settlement
- The Plastics Industry Searches for a ‘Circular’ Way to Cut Plastic Waste and Make More Plastics
- It's National Tequila Day 2023: See deals, recipes and drinks to try
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Taylor Swift's Star-Studded Fourth of July Party Proves She’s Having Anything But a Cruel Summer
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- The debt ceiling deal bulldozes a controversial pipeline's path through the courts
- Nature vs. nurture - what twin studies mean for economics
- Birmingham honors the Black businessman who quietly backed the Civil Rights Movement
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- A year after Yellowstone floods, fishing guides have to learn 'a whole new river'
- A Plan To Share the Pain of Water Scarcity Divides Farmers in This Rural Nevada Community
- A Petroleum PR Blitz in New Mexico
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
One mom takes on YouTube over deadly social media blackout challenge
Exxon’s Long-Shot Embrace of Carbon Capture in the Houston Area Just Got Massive Support from Congress
Project Runway All Stars' Johnathan Kayne Knows That Hard Work Pays Off
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Jessica Simpson and Eric Johnson's Steamiest Pics Are Irresistible
How Kyra Sedgwick Made Kevin Bacon's 65th Birthday a Perfect Day
Two free divers found dead in Hawaii on Oahu's North Shore