Israeli parliament on Monday voted in favor of a judicial reforms bill supported by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that has ignited mass protests.
The Reasonableness Standard Bill, part of a judicial reform package, passed along a 64-0 vote after members of the opposition left the Knesset hall once the voted started.
Netanyahu, who was released from the hospital earlier Monday after being fitted for a pacemaker, had arrived at Israeli parliament, known as the Knesset, to continue negotiating revisions to the bill that seeks to limit the Supreme Court’s powers to reject government or executive decisions based on the current reasonableness standard.
Critics of the legislation say it would feed corruption and lean toward authoritarianism by preventing the country’s highest court from quashing the appointment of corrupt officials and allowing the ruling coalition to expunge individuals who disagree with its policies. However, those in favor of the bill say it will reign in the judiciary, arguing the reasonableness standard is too vague and allows the courts to reject the decisions of election officials based on political grounds.
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On Sunday night, President Biden reportedly cautioned Netanyahu against rushing toward a vote. The Knesset is scheduled to go on recess at the end of this week until mid-October, the Wall Street Journal reported, and there has been talk of potentially extending the current session to allow time to negotiate.
“From the perspective of Israel’s friends in the United States, it looks like the current judicial reform proposal is becoming more divisive, not less,” Biden said in a statement to Axios, addressing Netanyahu. “Given the range of threats and challenges confronting Israel right now, it doesn’t make sense for Israeli leaders to rush this — the focus should be on pulling people together and finding consensus.”
“We believe that fundamental changes should be pursued with the broadest possible base of support,” a U.S. State Department official echoed in a statement to Politico late Sunday.
Netanyahu and his far-right allies, a collection of ultra-nationalist and ultra-Orthodox parties, say the changes are needed to curb the powers of unelected judges. Their opponents, coming largely from Israel’s professional middle class, say the plan will destroy a fragile system of checks and balances.
“This is a clash between the Israelis and the Jews,” Gideon Rahat, chair of the political science department at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, told the Journal. “It’s a clash between a more civil identity and a more religious identity.”
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Those in support of the judicial reforms say the bill will properly balance the powers of government, categorizing how an activist and liberal Supreme Court has blocked legislation pushed forward by Netanyahu’s government despite its growing political power. Opponents fear the judicial reforms could usher in an ethno-religious state that would potentially afford Jews a greater status above other citizens.
Demonstrators, many of whom feel the very foundations of their country are being eroded, stepped up their opposition, blocking a road leading up to parliament.
Businesses shuttered their doors in protest at the vote.
Further ratcheting up the pressure, thousands of military reservists have been declaring their refusal to serve under a government taking steps that they see as setting the country on the wrong path. Those moves have prompted fears that the military’s preparedness could be compromised.
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“We are in a state of national emergency,” Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who returned Sunday from a trip to the White House, said in a statement Monday. “During these decisive hours, I call on elected officials to act with courage, and to reach out in order to arrive at understanding.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.