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Historic struggle over democracy lands in Israel’s Supreme Court

After months of political crisis that have already damaged Israel’s economy, military, and social fabric, the front line of what many view as the struggle for Israeli democracy has now reached the Supreme Court.

For the first time ever, the entire panel of 15 justices sat in judgment as lawyers for both sides sparred over a law that curbs the Supreme Court’s authority to review government decisions. And, for the first time ever, legal analysts predict, the justices may in fact strike down a quasi-constitutional Basic Law. In another first, an Israeli government is threatening to not abide by a court ruling if it goes against it – setting up what analysts fear could be an unprecedented constitutional crisis.

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The issue of the balance of power between Israel’s judicial and legislative branches is now before the very Supreme Court justices whose authority the government is seeking to curtail, with arguments invoking the country’s core democratic values.

“This is one of the most important cases in Israeli history,” says Amir Fuchs, a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute. Both sides contend it will dictate the future of Israel’s democratic system.

What happens next is in the hands of the judges, though a decision is not expected soon.

“We have a conflict, a battle between two branches of government in Israel. Who represents the people? Who represents democracy? Who has the upper hand? We have never been [here] before,” says Professor Reuven Hazan, a political scientist at Hebrew University. “We should never [have gotten] to this point.”

After months of political crisis that have already damaged Israel’s economy, military, and social fabric, the front line of what many view as the struggle for Israeli democracy has now reached the Supreme Court.  

Anticipation of the showdown was in the air in Tel Aviv this past Saturday night, when, in the 36th straight week of anti-government protests, Israeli rock icon Shalom Hanoch regaled the estimated 120,000 demonstrators with his 1985 hit protest anthem.

“The Messiah isn’t coming,” he bellowed as the crowd sang along. “The Messiah isn’t calling, either.”

Why We Wrote This

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The issue of the balance of power between Israel’s judicial and legislative branches is now before the very Supreme Court justices whose authority the government is seeking to curtail, with arguments invoking the country’s core democratic values.

There would be no heavenly intervention, Mr. Hanoch was intimating, to deliver Israel from the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and its monthslong efforts to radically overhaul the country’s judicial system, weaken the independence of the courts, and arrogate to itself potentially unchecked power.

He and the entire crowd knew this week would be fateful: The Supreme Court convened Tuesday to hear petitions against a bill – rammed through parliament in late July after compromise talks were abandoned – that removes the court’s ability to exercise judicial oversight over government decisions deemed “extremely unreasonable.”

Would the court itself intervene?

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