Israel Reboots Fiercely Opposed Judicial Campaign
Error: Contact form not found.
by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

People hold Israeli flags during a demonstration as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s nationalist coalition government presses on with its contentious judicial overhaul, in Tel Aviv, Israel, March 11, 2023. Photo: REUTERS/Nir Elias
Israeli lawmakers on Sunday began debating a bill that would limit the Supreme Court’s powers, rebooting a fiercely opposed judicial overhaul instigated by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s religious-nationalist coalition.
Anti-government demonstrations had prompted Netanyahu to suspend his judicial drive in March to allow compromise talks with opposition parties. He declared those talks fruitless last week and ordered some of the legislation to be revived.
The proposed changes, which included curbs on the court’s ability to rule against the government, had sparked frequent street protests before the March suspension and on Saturday night anti-overhaul activists blocked a major Tel Aviv highway.
Coalition lawmakers have indicated that the new bill would be a far softer version of previous proposals that had sought to almost totally roll back the Supreme Court’s power to rule against the executive.
The opposition, however, says the new bill would still open the door to corruption.
“You are renewing a legislation blitz meant to destroy the justice system’s independence and badly hurt Israeli democracy’s delicate checks and balances,” Labour lawmaker Gilad Kariv said as the debate began.
Opposition leader Yair Lapid on Twitter urged Netanyahu to stop the legislation and revive negotiations “until we reach agreements that will safeguard democracy and prevent a national disaster”.
The proposed judicial overhaul has also stirred Western concern over Israel‘s democratic health and spooked investors. Critics see it as an attempt to curb court independence by Netanyahu, who is on trial on graft charges that he denies.
The coalition says its goal is to balance the powers of the government, legislature and judiciary by reining in a Supreme Court they see as too interventionist.
Anti-Israel US Senate Candidate in Maine Hit With Sexual Assault Allegation as Campaign Falters
French Jewish Tourists Chased Through Barcelona Streets in Antisemitic Harassment Incident
New York City Jews Most Targeted Minority Group in 2026, NYPD Report Says
‘Real Change Can Begin’: New Israeli Study Points to Common Ground on Future of Conflict With Palestinians
‘Death to America’: Netanyahu Urges US Not to Provide F-35 Fighter Jets, Engine Technology to Turkey
Israeli Elections Are Coming — and They Don’t Work How You Think
How the Digital Public Square Failed Jews
While Summer Brings Quiet to Universities, Pro-Hamas Activism Remains
Where to Go Next After the Memorandum of Understanding with Iran?
Palestinian Authority: Hamas Stole Billions Meant for Gazan Civilians





Palestinian Authority: Hamas Stole Billions Meant for Gazan Civilians
Anti-Israel US Senate Candidate in Maine Hit With Sexual Assault Allegation as Campaign Falters
‘Real Change Can Begin’: New Israeli Study Points to Common Ground on Future of Conflict With Palestinians
‘Death to America’: Netanyahu Urges US Not to Provide F-35 Fighter Jets, Engine Technology to Turkey
Where to Go Next After the Memorandum of Understanding with Iran?



