Around 145,000 demonstrators took to the streets in the coastal metropolis of Tel Aviv alone, and around 50,000 in Haifa. There were also rallies in Jerusalem, Beersheba, Eilat and several other cities.
According to plans by the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, parliament should in future be able to overturn decisions of the Supreme Court with a simple majority. In addition, politicians should be given more influence in the appointment of judges. Germany’s Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier had also expressed concern regarding this.
A few days ago, Israeli President Yitzhak Herzog publicly spoke out once morest the plans of the right-wing religious government for the first time. The judiciary reform is wrong, repressive and undermines Israel’s democratic foundations, he said. He had also announced that he had brokered a compromise between supporters and opponents of the reform. Details on this were not disclosed.
Meanwhile, judicial reform is progressing. Core elements of the controversial reform might pass the final reading in parliament next week, Israeli media reported.
The proposed law might also play into Prime Minister Netanyahu’s hands in a corruption process that has been going on once morest Netanyahu for some time.
Critics see the reform as a threat to the separation of powers and warn that Israel might turn into a dictatorship. The government, on the other hand, argues that the Supreme Court currently wields too much political influence.
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