Israel now has no SUPREME court

The people hit the streets In Massive numbers to protest this


The right wing evil Nuttinbutayahoo scraped it together anyway
 
The president can just say fuck you to them

Why did the Israeli Parliament do this?

https://news.yahoo.com/netanyahu-leaves-hospital-israel-faces-071849403.html
Israel's parliament passes law limiting Supreme Court's power, sparking mass protests
Israel's Parliament approved divisive legislation Monday that remakes part of the country’s justice system, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was released from the hospital after having a pacemaker fitted.

The law weakens Supreme Court oversight of the government, a move that critics claim will erode Israel's democracy and threatens the secular character of its state institutions. It was approved despite months of protests, the biggest in Israel's history, that have engulfed the nation's military, business and legal communities.

Opposition lawmakers, who boycotted the vote, shouted "shame" as the "reasonableness" bill was approved.

The judicial overhaul has divided Israel, testing the fragile social ties that bind the country, rattling the cohesion of its powerful military and repeatedly drawing concern from its closest ally, the United States. It is being driven by Netanyahu's governing coalition, which is made up of ultranationalist and ultra-religious parties. They argue the reforms are necessary so that their rights and interests are protected.

Early Monday, protesters blocked a road leading to the Knesset, Israel's Parliament. Police used water cannons to push them back. Businesses across the country shuttered their doors in protest of the vote. The vote passed despite a warning from Israel's President Isaac Herzog Monday that Israel was in a "state of national emergency."
 
The president can just say fuck you to them

Israel has no constitution, this Court was imposed without checks and these unelected judges exercised dictatorial power in Israel. They've now realigned their Supreme Court to be more along the lines of other Democratic governments in the 1st world.
 
Israel has no constitution, this Court was imposed without checks and these unelected judges exercised dictatorial power in Israel. They've now realigned their Supreme Court to be more along the lines of other Democratic governments in the 1st world.

It’s going to cause a civil war in Israel
 
Israel has no constitution, this Court was imposed without checks and these unelected judges exercised dictatorial power in Israel. They've now realigned their Supreme Court to be more along the lines of other Democratic governments in the 1st world.

Looks like they need a constitution.
 
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supreme_Court_of_Israel



The Supreme Court consists of 15 judges appointed by the President of Israel, upon nomination by the Judicial Selection Committee. Once appointed, Judges serve until retirement at the age of 70 unless they resign or are removed from office. The current President of the Supreme Court is Esther Hayut. The Court is situated in Jerusalem's Givat Ram governmental campus, about half a kilometer from Israel's legislature, the Knesset.
 
Note the verbiage:

The Basic Laws of Israel (Hebrew: חוקי היסוד‎, romanized: Ḥukey HaYesod) are thirteen quasi-constitutional laws of the State of Israel, and some of them can only be changed by a supermajority vote in the Knesset (with varying requirements for different Basic Laws and sections). Many of these laws are based on the individual liberties that were outlined in the Israeli Declaration of Independence.[1] The Basic Laws deal with the formation and role of the principal institutions of the state, and with the relations between the state's authorities. They also protect the country's civil rights, although some of these rights were earlier protected at common law by the Supreme Court of Israel.[
 
Note the verbiage:

The Basic Laws of Israel (Hebrew: חוקי היסוד‎, romanized: Ḥukey HaYesod) are thirteen quasi-constitutional laws of the State of Israel, and some of them can only be changed by a supermajority vote in the Knesset (with varying requirements for different Basic Laws and sections). Many of these laws are based on the individual liberties that were outlined in the Israeli Declaration of Independence.[1] The Basic Laws deal with the formation and role of the principal institutions of the state, and with the relations between the state's authorities. They also protect the country's civil rights, although some of these rights were earlier protected at common law by the Supreme Court of Israel.[

No protection now


Nuttinbutayahoo owns them now
 
The Israel we know has fallen
The battle over the future of Israel — can it be both democratic and religious — goes on

In what appears to be a tragic convergence, in the week of Tisha B’Av, when we mark the destruction of the Temple, attributed by our sages to bitter hatred among Jews, the Knesset has passed the first piece of judicial reform that has torn Israeli society asunder.

When the President of Israel speaks publicly about Israel being in “a state of emergency,” it is not hyperbole to assert that as the bill to limit “reasonableness” in judicial decisions becomes law, Israel has gone over the cliff’s edge, no longer the democracy it has proudly fostered and sustained for 75 years. Civil war becomes an all-too real possibility, a dire threat to the security, economy and diplomatic status of the Jewish state as well as a moral failure that could unravel support among diaspora Jewry here and around the world.

We are in uncharted waters.

Biblical allusions to the ancient tragedy surround us. “Alas,” begins Lamentations, the ancient book we read on Tisha B’Av, describing Jerusalem in mourning. “She dwelt among the nations but found no rest, all her pursuers overtook her in narrow straits.”

The Three Weeks leading up to Tisha B’Av are a solemn period of mourning, leading up to the saddest day of the Jewish year. This summer, each of the past three weeks marked the passage in a Knesset committee of requirements to move forward in expunging “reasonableness” as a standard in Israeli law.

Footage from the air this week of tens of thousands of Israelis marching 37 miles from Tel Aviv to the Knesset evoked powerful images of the pilgrimages the Jewish people made to Jerusalem in days of old.

But the streets of Jerusalem today are not desolate, as described in Lamentations. They are filled with hundreds of thousands of Israelis, left, center and right, observant and secular, who represent the majority of citizens opposed to the pace and extremism of the current Knesset efforts. They are the hope for the future, the vanguard of all those committed to restore the balance of Israel as both a Jewish and democratic state.

https://forward.com/opinion/555263/israel-fallen-judicial-reform-democracy/
 
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