If Israel’s constitutional revolution succeeds, the government will be the law. It will be able to do almost anything it thinks of in the State of Israel. Proponents of the revolution try to justify it by repeating the mantra “Israel is the only country that …” By this they mean that Israel is the only unreformed country compared with the OECD countries or of the entire world, where things run along the lines of the proposed reform. They never bother to clarify that the comparison drawn always refers to a single component. Taken as a whole, Israel indeed turns out to be “special.” But not in a good way. The majority’s ability to trample human rights and abuse Israeli citizens will have no effective limit. 

It is possible, perhaps even appropriate, to examine a modification of the balance of power between the Supreme Court and the Knesset, but it needs to be done cautiously and with discretion and, as much as possible, on the basis of broad agreement.

The judicial reform currently being advanced by Justice Minister Yariv Levin touches every significant element of Israel’s constitutional structure. If it passes, the government will be virtually omnipotent. In contrast to the separation of powers that exists in every functioning democracy – between the executive branch (the government) and the legislative branch (the Knesset) – in Israel, the line is blurred beyond distinction, and in many cases they act like a single authority.

Read More