Judicial reform makes Israel more like Hungary than the US - legal expert
Mordechai Kremnitzer is opposed to Levin’s plan, warning that it would deal a fatal blow to the Supreme Court, the balance of power, and Israel’s robust democracy.
“I do not intend, like anybody here, to give up on his services. We will fix it.”Benjamin Netanyahu regarding Arye Deri
“I do not intend, like anybody here, to give up on his services. We will fix it,” Netanyahu told a cabinet meeting on January 22, adding that keeping Deri as at least an observer in the cabinet is in Israel’s national interest. Netanyahu, who is still facing a corruption trial himself, also vowed to push ahead with the judicial overhaul spearheaded by Justice Minister Yariv Levin.
To get an expert opinion on the issue, I spoke to Prof. Mordechai Kremnitzer, a Senior Fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute and a professor emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Kremnitzer is opposed to Levin’s plan, warning that it would deal a fatal blow to the Supreme Court, the balance of power, and Israel’s robust democracy. “Israel will have more in common with Hungary than with the United States,” he says. “And the story about shared values between Israel and the US will be only in the imagination and not in reality.”
“Israel will have more in common with Hungary than with the United States. And the story about shared values between Israel and the US will be only in the imagination and not in reality.”Mordechai Kremnitzer