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July 24, 2023

After Months of Buildup, Israeli Parliament Approves First Judicial Overhaul Law, Plunging Country Into Crisis

The clashes between Israeli citizens and police in front of the parliament building in Jerusalem on Monday as a contentious vote was being held in the plenum produced scenes rarely witnessed in the country. Demonstrators chained themselves to the scorching hot concrete road as policemen tried to forcibly remove them.

Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, approved a law that is part of a government effort to overhaul the judicial system, a move that has drawn major criticism from the opposition, large portions of Israeli society, and the United States.

Lawmakers from the opposition did not participate in the vote, storming out in protest, shouting “shame” at coalition members.

The passing of the law has the potential of plunging Israel into a constitutional crisis, putting the different branches of government in serious conflict. But for now, the government is celebrating a victory after facing fierce opposition. This victory may be short-lived.

“We have just taken the first step in the important historical process of fixing the judicial system and regaining the authorities that were taken from the government and the Knesset for many years,” said a satisfied Justice Minister Yariv Levin.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the Knesset just before the vote began, rushing straight from a Tel Aviv hospital, a day after he underwent a procedure to implant a pacemaker for his heart.

In the hours before the vote, attempts were made to reach a compromise between the sides on the law that bars Israel’s High Court of Justice from using the “reasonability standard” when reviewing decisions made by the government, cabinet ministers, and other government officials. For opponents, the law is seen as promoting corruption. For the victorious coalition, it brings hope that they will be able to remove any hurdles that they perceive are barring them from governing.

Before the vote, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said the country is “in a state of national emergency.” Herzog has been behind the failed efforts to reach a compromise in recent months.

After being sworn in late last year, the coalition embarked on a legislation blitz that was not only aimed at changing the judiciary but touched almost every aspect of civilian life in the country. It raised concern among the opposition that the government’s divisive plan was trying to change the face of the nation.

The right wing believes the courts have gained too much power in recent decades, often intervening in political matters. In their original form, the reforms included giving parliament the ability to override Supreme Court rulings with a simple majority. In addition, the government wanted to give politicians greater influence in the appointment of Supreme Court justices and legal advisers to ministries, allowing them to be political appointments and no longer civil servants.

Opponents of the reforms say they constitute a judicial “coup,” and are concerned the courts will be significantly weakened, posing a serious threat to the future of Israeli democracy.

“This is not a victory for the coalition, this is a defeat for Israeli democracy,” said Opposition Leader Yair Lapid minutes after the vote. Lapid announced he would be behind a petition to the Supreme Court against the reasonability law. Other petitions are also expected, threatening to plunge the nation into a constitutional crisis.

“This is the greatest crisis Israel has ever faced,” Lapid added.

Professor Eugene Kontorovich, of the Antonin Scalia School of Law at George Mason University, told The Media Line that the High Court of Justice could hear multiple petitions to restore the reasonability standard because “in Israel, the Supreme Court has eliminated any restrictions on its jurisdiction, such as standing, ripeness, or political question, used by courts in the US to limit their own power and preserve checks and balances.” Thus, he says, “anyone can challenge any law at any time.”

However, in this case, the law in question is an amendment to a basic law, which the court has previously treated as having constitutional status. “If the Supreme Court strikes down constitutional amendments as being somehow unconstitutional, it effectively asserts unbridled power for itself. Hopefully, the court will not act as a judge in its own case.”

Kontorovich thinks it is “still possible and desirable to reach compromises about judicial reform with the opposition when the Knesset resumes its session” after the summer recess.

“Without the reasonability standard, and if other standards will also be erased, we could see the firing of the attorney general and other legal counsels,” Professor Daphna Hacker, from the Buchmann Faculty of Law and Gender Studies at Tel Aviv University and a member of the Israeli Law Professors’ Forum for Democracy, told The Media Line. “If the Supreme Court rules that the government is not allowed to take certain actions and the government takes them anyway, this is a constitutional crisis. This means the government has stopped acting according to the rules of democracy that still exist.”

“There will be a big question of who bodies such as the army and other security institutions will obey,” she added.

Attorney Ze’ev Lev, legal counsel for the Movement for Governability and Democracy, told The Media Line that the Supreme Court would not strike down the new law. The removal of the reasonability standard comes as an amendment to Basic Law: The Judiciary. Lev questions the authority of the high court to strike down elements of basic laws.

For the government, the law passed on Monday was not the centerpiece of its efforts but rather a compromise based on the realization that the wider moves were too controversial to pass.

“The law does not have huge importance in the larger reform,” said Lev. “The reasonability standard was a wild card the court was able to use in any situation, as opposed to other more defined and objective standards. This amendment begins to correct the relations between the executive branch and the judiciary.”

The struggle for the reforms has taken over the agenda of the country and torn it apart. Weekly demonstrations held by opponents of Netanyahu have gathered tens of thousands of Israelis from all walks of life. Violent incidents and clashes with police have grown in intensity.

In late March, after weeks of demonstrations, Netanyahu announced he was freezing the legislation and entering talks to reach a compromise with the opposition.

This came after the Israeli premier announced the firing of his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, for warning of the reform’s dangers. A significant portion of his supporters were against the move. There was also a feeling among more moderate right-wing supporters that the legislation blitz was too aggressive. Netanyahu later backtracked on the sacking of Gallant, who remains in his position and voted with the coalition on the reasonability law on Monday.

Last month, after weeks of negotiations, the sides failed to reach an agreement on the judicial selection committee and the talks collapsed. This reignited the protest movement. Simultaneously, Netanyahu and his coalition then resumed the one-sided legislation, using their parliamentary majority, without seeking a broader consensus.

“We are all in shock, struggling while trying to digest the size of the fracture,” said Hacker. “Even as a pessimist, I never imagined how much they don’t care about the other side and about the economy. I never thought they would be willing to make Israel a failing state.”

After the law was approved, the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange began to crash and the local currency, the shekel, began to weaken against the dollar.

One of the main concerns opponents have raised is that the Israeli economy will suffer immense losses due to the judicial reform.

Even before the legislation began, the unrest in the country has brought a continuous devaluation of the shekel and a drop in investments in Israeli high-tech, which is considered the main engine driving the country’s economy.

Another criticism of the government reforms relates to Netanyahu’s motivation to promote it after years of being in power without touching the judiciary. The opposition believes the move is personally motivated by Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption and wants to be able to change the outcome of the case. The prime minister, who denies any wrongdoing, also denies that a personal motivation exists.

Throughout his years in power, Netanyahu has accumulated a long list of politicians disappointed by promises undelivered. The opposition is especially wary of any promises he makes, including promises made to US President Joe Biden that he would seek a broad consensus on the rest of the judicial overhaul.

“In the past few days, Netanyahu has lied to the public repeatedly about his health, despite a legal obligation [to disclose the truth]; why should I believe anything he says?” Hacker asked.

In the past week, in another whirling development, Netanyahu was hospitalized. In statements released by both his office and Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer, the premier was said to have suffered from dehydration and was fitted with a heart monitor as a precaution. Days later, Netanyahu was rushed to hospital after an abnormality was detected by the monitor. In an emergency procedure, a pacemaker was implanted early Sunday. Critics of Netanyahu said he was not transparent and accused him of hiding important details about his health, suggesting a preexisting heart condition was concealed from the public. The seemingly small event fueled further distrust between the premier and his rivals.

At the end of this week, the Knesset will begin its summer recess, reconvening in the early fall. Netanyahu’s partners vowed to push forward with the reforms and the protesters promised to continue with their resistance.

“There will now be a few months without legislation,” said Lev. “Assuming the Supreme Court will not accept the petitions, the average Israeli will realize that there was unnecessary panic and the government will be able to promote the reforms in a calmer manner with an honest attempt to reach a compromise.”

As protesters filled the streets of Jerusalem after the vote and clashed with police, compromise seems more distant than ever before.

To read more articles from The Media Line, click here.

After Months of Buildup, Israeli Parliament Approves First Judicial Overhaul Law, Plunging Country Into Crisis Read More »

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Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #29: Mark Goes to Iceland

On this week’s episode of “You Don’t Know Schiff,” Mark and Lowell talk while Mark is in a car in Iceland and at a waterfall. Fingers crossed that Mark didn’t fall into a fjord and that he made it back home safely.

Your hosts:
markschiff.com
Twitter: @markschiff
Instagram: markschiff1

Lowell Benjamin
Twitter: @lowellcbenjamin
Instagram: @lowellcbenjamin

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #29: Mark Goes to Iceland Read More »

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #29: Mark Goes to Iceland

On this week's episode of “You Don't Know Schiff,” Mark and Lowell talk while Mark is in a car in Iceland and at a waterfall. Fingers crossed that Mark didn't fall into a fjord and that he made it back home safely.

Your hosts:
markschiff.com
Twitter: @markschiff
Instagram: markschiff1
 

Lowell Benjamin
Twitter: @lowellcbenjamin
Instagram: @lowellcbenjamin

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #29: Mark Goes to Iceland Read More »

“Barbie” Is A Blast That Boasts a Fun Cast

“Some of my best friends are Jewish,” Will Ferrell says as the CEO of Mattel in the new film, “Barbie.” It’s a bizarre moment after he is trying to claim the company loves women, even though all the people on his board are men.

There will certainly be those who criticize the film and say it is a “woke war on men” or something to that effect. They should check for their sense of humor in the lost and found.

Robbie stars as the beautiful blonde Barbie (though there are numerous other Barbies) and Gosling portrays the yellow haired and buff Ken, though there are other Kens.

Gosling is impressive in that he shows he doesn’t take himself too seriously. The film pokes fun at him a lot. This is not to say there is no such thing as toxic masculinity, but writers Greta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach exaggerate it hilarious effect. The Kens change Barbie Dreamhouses into “Mojo Dojo Casa Houses.” Barbie and Ken go to the real world and as a result, things in Barbieland have changed to where it is Kendom.

There’s a hilarious scene where the Kens try to impress the Barbies by singing “Push” by Matchbox Twenty. The chorus includes: “I Want To Push Around/Well I will/Well, I will/I want to push you down, well I will, well I will, I want to take you for granted…”

The lyrics include that the man can’t change. Right now, there are many young men playing the guitar and singing hoping to impress women this summer, though hopefully, they’re not playing this song.

The film does not attempt to be the most profound in the world, but there is a real message against being formulaic and being an individual. Ken sees that in the real world men have way more power than women, so he takes that idea to the fantasy world. It is true that Barbie has taken him for granted, but as a result he pretends to not care about her.

Barbie is seen as a fun doll, though the film gives a nod to the truth that many young women may feel objectified or struggle to try to maintain a perfect body image. Barbie starts to feel something is wrong when her feet become pointed and, wait for it…she develops a bit of cellulite on her leg.

One commercial for Barbie in the film notes that “anxiety, panic attacks and OCD” are sold separately.

Formerly of “Saturday Night Love,” Kate McKinnon is quite funny as a weird Barbie who is upset that the other Barbies talk badly about her. Hari Nef, who is Jewish, Dua Lipa and Issa Rae are some of the other Barbies who are solid in their roles, including a purposely cliched scene where Gosling takes off Nef’s glasses to see greater beauty. Kingsley Ben-Adir, who is Jewish, is likeable as one of the Kens.

Ferrell is of course, funny, in several moments including one when he asks people to tickle him. While the metaphor is a bit on the nose when the Mattel workers try to put Barbie back in a box, literally, the point is clear that humans can never have physical perfection, though Robbie and Gosling, are fairly close to it.

The film gets a lot of heart from the mother-daughter combo of Gloria and Sasha, played with a heaping dose of realism by America Ferrera and Ariana Greenblatt, who is at first a tough schoolkid who is mean to Barbie and to a lesser extent, her mother, before showing a warmer side.

Barbie is an iconic symbol of Americana and one would hope parents taught there children that people cannot be perfect like dolls. There’s a great moment where a proposal is made to have a regular Barbie and Ferrell, as the CEO, rejects the idea until he is told it would make the company a lot of money.

Created by Handler and released in 1959, Barbara Millicent Roberts was named after Handler’s daughter Barbara, and Ken was named after her son of the same name. The doll is sold in over 100 countries.

In one funny moment, Ken laments that he is nothing without Barbie and even wears a shirt that reads: “I am KENough.”

Are women sometimes objectified? Yes. Do men sometimes think they have to act super macho, get big muscles and never show their true feelings? Yes.

If you come expecting Shakespeare or are looking at every line as a part of a political manifesto, you will be sorely disappointed. If you are in the mood for a fun film that does include some harsh truths, while poking fun at them, this is a film for you.

“Barbie” certainly ends with a humorous and memorable line.

There is a fight scene that is so absurd, it rivals the one from “Anchorman.”

Perlman is fitting in the role of the doll’s creator, Ruth Handler, as a person who wants the best for Barbie.

While the film is ostensibly about female empowerment, it is about every person being genuine and living a life that is not contingent on the acceptance or praise of another, which is an important lesson that many never learn.

The script could have been a bit tighter, but I appreciate that they had a song or two, in which it appears that Gosling sings.

Gosling and Robbie have comedic chemistry and it would be interesting to see the two stars alongside each other in other films. Ferrell could have also been way wilder, but perhaps the goal was not to scare the children.

It’s a fact of life that people prioritize good looks and that will likely never change. That doesn’t mean the film is sending the message that to be liked, you have to go to the gym twice a day.

That Barbie shocks her friends early in the film as she talks about her fears of death, only to change to keep it light, shows that we are encouraged to avoid sharing our true fears. It is also true that highly attractive people are sometimes stereotyped as being dumb or selfish when they shouldn’t be. There is also the message that a parent needs to allow a child freedom to both succeed and make errors.

I can’t stand the “Barbie Girl” song, but the film is worth sitting through and far more entertaining than I thought it would be. As I left the theater, I saw a young woman berate her boyfriend until he agreed to stand in front of the Barbie poster as she took a picture and posted it to social media. That’s a bit extra. But then again, so is the film.

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Of Germs, Race and Newfangled Hatreds

Pick your brand of antisemitism. Go ahead. Nowadays there are plenty of varieties from which to choose. Jew-hatred comes in many sizes, shapes, and colors—a vast cornucopia of contempt. It’s positively dizzying.

If you despise Jews, this must be your heyday.

All the vintage expressions of antisemitism are still available—blood libels and the like, albeit in a form updated to make it more believable to imbeciles. A university professor received a book award for an unintelligible (I dare you to understand a single sentence) treatise (it’s not in any known language, so I hesitate to actually say “book”), in which she charges the Israeli Defense Forces with harvesting the organs of Palestinians, and alleges that Israel has stunted the growth of Palestinian children.

We’ve apparently come a long way from the days of yore when Jewish savagery was confined to kidnapping Christian children and using their blood to make matzo. (I prefer my bread of affliction flavorfully o-negative, in case you’re wondering.)

The moral crime of denial, and its attachments to antisemitism, has never had such a wide reach and easy adaptability. One can deny the Holocaust, Israel’s existence, the ancestral connection between Jews and the Holy Land, the Jewish right to self-determination, Jewish victimhood, the history of Jewish solidarity with African-Americans, and the very presence of antisemitism itself. All casually negated without any affinity for historical truth or common decency.

An underlying ideology doesn’t seem to matter either. Who has time to be particular? Those on the far left and far right agree on almost nothing other than their mutual hatred of Jews. Newfangled tropes, repackaged but easily recognizable, never go out of season.

That’s why a week in which a progressive congresswoman, Pramila Jayapal, can openly call Israel a “racist state,” and a viable presidential candidate, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., can suggest that Jews possess either some racial immunity to COVID-19, or perhaps were involved in engineering the virus so that they are impervious to its effects, is no real shocker.

Jayapal is a member in good standing of the Squad—self-described women of color who seemingly can’t refrain from repeating antisemitic canards and debasing Israel. She surely knew that, nowadays, any charge of racism summons the crushing wave of the cancellation culture. To libel a person as racist is akin to moral banishment. The punishment for Zionists is even worse, given that the endgame is to strip the Jewish state of its legitimacy and sovereignty.

It’s also a convenient way to recast one’s antisemitism as a call for human rights—”My hatred is toward Israel, and not the Jewish people.”—as if such a distinction is possible. The homeland and the people are inseparable—the ties biblical, and umbilical.

Jayapal was availing herself of a privilege—the moral authority of a person of color—to incriminate Israel as a racist state, and render a death sentence. She wasn’t just making an accusation; she was delivering a forgone conclusion. Her later apology did not disavow the finality.

It just so happens there is a new definition of antisemitism, adopted by nearly 40 nations, including the State Department of the United States, in which calling Israel a racist state, denying Jews the right to self-determination, and holding Israel to a standard expected of no other nation, is categorically antisemitic.

Progressives, apparently, prefer the older definition.

As for RFK Jr., he knows that a Palestinian assassinated his father on account of his support for Israel. Bobby Kennedy’s namesake is no antisemite. The son’s problem is that his endorsement of coronavirus falsehoods encapsulates all conspiracy theories, which often share one thing in common: Jews are at the epicenter, whether they involve financial collapses, world wars, 9/11, and, of course, pandemics of any kind.

It’s not just that Kennedy was wrong about a Jewish immunity to COVID. It’s that the mere mention of Jews and communicable diseases unleashed a whirlwind of historical associations, urban legends, rural superstitions, and dangerous stereotypes at a time when far too many Americans are conspiracy-minded, and their minds are already made up.

People will believe almost anything, especially if it involves Jews. “There were no Jews in the World Trade Center on 9/11.” “Jews financed the slave trade.” “Jews are disloyal and dodge military service.” Myth-making has never enjoyed such a robust market or attracted such warped alliances.

Why would feminists and LGBTQ groups march alongside Palestinians who embrace the Muslim Brotherhood, follow Sharia law, and have no compunction beheading women and torching homosexuals?  Women aren’t even permitted to learn to read or drive a car.

These are your chosen political partners?

Meanwhile, in Israel, women wear sleeveless dresses and serve as prime minister and supreme court justices. Homosexuals hold hands at Tel Aviv’s annual Gay Pride Parade, the only one in the Middle East and the largest one in Asia.

Progressive Democrats are ostensibly advocating for the end of a democratic state and the creation of an oppressive one. It’s either insanity or antisemitism. My bet is on the latter.

So much for soft bigotries of diminished expectations. In a society that regards success as achievable only through racism, American Jews, who overachieved in the 20th century when meritocracy was viewed favorably, today are caught red-handed as putative racists.

Old habits linger, and then materialize anew. The Rothschild family’s diabolical hold on world finance still exists in the minds of many, even though the family is probably on food stamps by now. Those addicted to the scheming chatrooms on the internet attribute to all Jews the malfeasances of Bernie Madoff, Jeffrey Epstein, Harvey Weinstein, and other circumcised scoundrels.

For them, Jews are always at the dashboard in their control over commerce, government, media, and Hollywood. Ironically, with Diversity, Equity and Inclusion officers dictating so many decisions these days—from job offers to college admissions to cultural storylines—the presence of Jews in all of these power centers is rapidly diminishing. Soon the overrepresentation of Jews in many industries may become untrue.

Good luck convincing an implacable antisemite, however.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled “Saving Free Speech … From Itself.” 

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