The Israeli Fight Over Judicial Review Highlights the Dangers of Unconstrained Democracy
Opponents of the proposed reforms are right that unlimited majority rule is a recipe for tyranny.

This week, in response to mass demonstrations and a nascent general strike, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delayed legislative consideration of his right-wing coalition's judicial reform agenda. Both sides in the acrimonious battle over that plan say they are defending democracy, which is a misleading way to frame an issue that should be familiar to Americans.
The controversy, which Netanyahu said threatens to become "a civil war," is really about what sort of democracy Israel should be—in particular, how much power judges should have to override the will of the majority. While Netanyahu's allies are right that judicial review is a constraint on democracy, their opponents are right that unconstrained democracy is a recipe for tyranny.
More than two centuries ago in Marbury v. Madison, the U.S. Supreme Court established the principle that the judicial branch can override legislation that is inconsistent with the Constitution. "It is emphatically the province and duty of the Judicial Department to say what the law is," Chief Justice John Marshall declared, and judges therefore must decide what happens when they "apply the rule to particular cases" and find that "two laws conflict with each other."
The Israeli Supreme Court reached a similar conclusion in the 1995 case United Mizrahi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village, asserting the power to overturn statutes that conflict with Israel's "basic laws." Since the 1990s, Israeli law professors Amichai Cohen and Yuval Shany note, the court "has invalidated 22 laws or legal provisions" based on "its new powers of judicial review."
Among other things, those cases involved treatment of asylum seekers, discriminatory tax rates, expropriation of Palestinian land, religious exemptions from military service, and due process for detainees. But the impact of judicial review extends beyond those specific decisions, Cohen and Shany observe, because the question of whether legislation can survive it "has become a dominant consideration in the legislative process."
This is the "constitutional revolution" that Netanyahu's coalition members resent, although that term is misleading, since Israel has no formal constitution and the Knesset, Israel's parliament, can amend its basic laws at will. In response to what they see as undemocratic interference by unelected judges, legislators have proposed various contentious reforms.
The proposals including legislation that would guarantee the government a majority on the committee that selects judges, restrict the circumstances in which the Supreme Court can invalidate statutes, eliminate the precedential force of such decisions, and allow the Knesset to override them by a majority vote. In practice, Cohen and Shany say, those changes would mean "the end of judicial review of Knesset legislation."
The plan's supporters think it's about time. "At school they told me that Israel is a democracy," conservative commentator Evyatar Cohen wrote this week. "They said that as soon as I reach the age of 18 I can go to the polls and influence the future of the country, its character and goals."
Newspaper columnist Nadav Eyal, by contrast, welcomed the pause that Netanyahu announced. "Israeli democracy may die one day," he wrote. "But it will not happen this week, nor this month, nor this spring."
Both of those takes elide the reality that untrammeled majority rule is a threat to civil liberties. Netanyahu himself has recognized that point.
"A strong and independent justice system," he noted in 2012, is the difference between governments that respect "human rights" and governments that merely pay lip service to them. He promised he would "do everything in my power to safeguard a strong and independent justice system."
Netanyahu, who faces corruption charges that will be adjudicated by that system, now presents himself as a mediator between his coalition partners' demands and the concerns that have driven hundreds of thousands of Israelis to the streets in protest. The question is not only whether he can broker a compromise but whether it will preserve the safeguards he rightly described as essential to the rule of law and the protection of individual rights.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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I appreciate an independent judiciary. I think that they were wrong to try to attempt this sort of power grab. Usually these sorts of things come back to bite the majority party right in their figurative asses as soon as they become the minority party. Any fair arrangement for government needs safeguards against simple majority rule.
But, isn't 'unconstrained democracy' also the rioting?
Are the demonstrations בעיקר שלווה?
(Google tells me this means "mostly peaceful")
Before Jews stole Palestine to create their occupied shithole apartheid state, Jews, Arabs and Christians lived together in Palestine in peace.
Bulldozing and terrorizing whole communities to create a xenophobic state for “the chosen people” ended the peace.
Israel is a fascist police state. Even Jews have had enough.
Miko Peled is an Israeli, an author, a public speaker and the son of a famous Israeli general.
He is also opposed to Israeli apartheid of Palestinians.
In the following video he puts into perspective what you won't see in our western propaganda.
Between 40:40 and 43:45 in the video he describes Israeli terrorism.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=TOaxAckFCuQ
Nobody is going watch your Nazi agitprop.
Hey bigot fuckwit.
The video is by an Israeli Jew, son of a famous Israeli military general, calling out the Israel he knows far better than you.
You can crawl back under your rock.
So you’re with the terrorists? What a surprise. Nazis and Islamic Jihadi monsters historically found common cause. So of course you side with the villains.
When you watch a Indiana Jones films, you root for the Nazis, don’t you?
Nazis, Islamic terrorists got nothing on you Kol Nidre boy
Israel that stolen shithole apartheid state has received more aid most of it military from the U.S. than any other nation, 250 billion, since its theft in 1948 which started the last 75 years of conflict in the Middle East.
But that’s not anywhere near the total cost all the theft of Palestine.
The Costs to American Taxpayers of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: $3 Trillion
https://ifamericansknew.org/stat/cost.html
That’s still not the total cost of the Jewish theft of Palestine.
The Balfour declaration was a promise of Palestine to Jews for bringing the anti war US into WW1 on the side of Britain that resulted in two more years of war and millions of lives.
Jewish Bolsheviks led by Lenin also overthrew the Russian government in 1917 creating a civil war, communism and the KGB. How much has Russian communism cost?
So Jews brought the US into the war, for the promise of Palestine, then left the war themselves letting the American dead achieve their purpose for them.
In 1933 Jews were becoming impatient for their promised land, Palestine, and coordinated global boycotts against Germany to drive the world into WW2. How much did that cost?
In 1948 Jews finally stole Palestine referencing the Balfour Declaration and initiated the Middle East conflict that has raged and grown ever since. How much has that mess cost the world?
No, Nazis and Islamic terrorists have got nothing on Jews.
I like feeding the bleating trolls truth they can’t refute with correctly applied logic and science and laughing as they choke on it.
Hahaha
You mean a Nazi anti-Semite is against Israel?! Shocked, I tell you!
Left-wingers find that difficult to accept, you know.
this sort of power grab
As it stands, Israel's judiciary appoints itself and determines for itself the extent of its power. Adding some checks and balances to an unconstrained judiciary that faces literally no accountability from the electorate is far from a power grab.
Usually these sorts of things come back to bite the majority party right in their figurative asses
The background here is that Israel's supreme court is extremely far left and, since it selects successors for its own justices, there's no mechanism for that to change in the foreseeable future. There's no possible way that any change to the judiciary could backfire on the right.
If that is the case, reform is 100% needed. Absolutely unaccountable parts of government are the worst offenders of the core tenets of democracy.
I mean, Israel appears to be facing the worst of both worlds: pure mob rule democracy or pure unelected power brokers. Complete reform seems to be needed.
Excellent point Moonrocks. The extraordinary powers of the Israeli judiciary, much more powerful than the American judiciary, demonstrates the unrestrained tyranny of the minority. Unlike the Supreme Court in the United States, which only hears cases between two adversary parties with standing, the Israeli Supreme Court has its own self declared standing and on its own can challenge laws passed by a majority in the Knesset, then declare those laws invalid.
"The background here is that Israel’s supreme court is extremely far left"
Even Bibi hasn't claimed any such thing. It's pretty right wing, in fact. It's just inconvenient for Bibi that it can stop some of his more batshit crazy nonsense.
Hence why, for just about the only time in its history, almost the entire Israeli population is in agreement about something, and there are massive, popular, demonstrations in the streets.
My understanding, though, is that the judiciary is effectively captured by the current opposition. And since the government doesn't actually have a majority in the committee that selects judges, there's no ability to democratically change that.
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No country was more democratic, more united, more certain that they were right and justified when defending themselves than.... Nazi Germany! Consensus doesn't guarantee rationality, objectivity.
Use of reason does. Debate helps. Nazis didn't believe in free speech, like Biden, they believed dissent was treason. All governments are founded on the initiation of violence, threats, fraud, not reason,
The Nazis never won an election. There was nothing democratic about their seizure of power.
So how does judicial review work for a parliamentary system which does not have a written Constitution?
In the US system, the Court's judicial review powers are, at least, theoretically constrained by the text of the Constitution and amendments. That is why the concept of of a "living Constitution" is so pernicious. If there is no Constitution, what are the limits of judicial review and what prevents the government from being ruled by the whims of a judicial oligarchy?
Who decides what the constitution means? It's people all the way down.
Text, original meaning, and precedent/ stare decisis.
Now how a particular jurist views those things is another matter. But if they truly adhere to the Constitution, it shouldn't be all that hard; it's when someone wants to achieve a forgone outcome that they start playing with the law, and you end up with bad decisions like Roe [that eventually get overturned].
Yeah the treasonous [De/WE]-mo[b/cr]-acracy party has conquered the USA too by ideologically changing it's government from a Constitution land of Individual Liberty and Justice to let the BIGGEST gang rule/own everyone and everything.
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In both Israel and the US the power of the judiciary to overrule the legislature is a power they granted themselves. A plainly worded constitution subject to amendment by a majority would in theory restrain all branches. But as we have seen the judiciary frequently feels no such constraint. I'm not taking sides here because I don't know anything about Israeli government. But the idea that judges are better at governance then legislators in every case is not a reasonable conclusion.
Welllll,…somebody took the case to court. So it’s not the judiciary that gave themselves the power, it’s the people who took their case to them. If you didn’t want their opinion, why’d you ask them?
This may read as flippant to some of you, but how else could it possibly be? You install judges to decide a case according to law. They look at the law, including what’s supposed to be the supreme law of their jurisdiction, so how else could they possibly decide? Were they supposed to rule on only part of the body of law, and neglect the constitution? Were they supposed to go by somebody else's opinion about that portion of the law, when you were asking them for their opinion? I’ve never figured out how those who think judicial review in the USA was a momentous establishment why they think it’s momentous.
Well the article references Marbury in the US and an Israeli supreme court case wherein both courts explicitly claim for themselves the power to overturn legislation so I'm not sure what your point is.
"Israel has no formal constitution and the Knesset, Israel's parliament, can amend its basic laws at will."
That would seem to be at the heart of the problem, at least as I understand it. Simple majority rule without guarantees that protect individual rights from overreaching government is tyranny; similarly, an independent judiciary without guiding principles and limitations on government can be equally as bad.
We get it, Jacob. You want the world to know you hate Jews. Really hate them. Easter is coming up. You need to indulge your Passion.
But wouldn't it be even more effective in telling people what you think to use 'I hate Jews' as the headline, and then copy and paste the same phrase a few hundred times as the body?
Live by your principles, don't shy away from it.
Sullum is true filth.
The issue in Israel is that judges are choosing their own successors in a fairly secretive process.
https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/judges-shouldnt-participate-in-appointing-their-successors/
This would allow the entenchment of a single view into the court system making political changing winds meaningless. Imagine the court that passed everything FDR did selecting their own successors in order to maintain the laws many viewed as wrong or unconstitutional.
That is indeed a problem. The proposed reforms are at least partially right.
This article seems rather one-sided. Yes, a government that can ignore judicial oversight risks becoming a Tyranny of the Majority - democracy at its worst. But Israel also has no constraints on its judicial processes. It is at risk of becoming a kritocracy with no accountability to the governed at all.
Sullum writes an article simping for globohomo totalitarianism.
Of course.
His writing is truly execrable,
Note the Pride flags present in crowds ostensibly protesting judicial reform and a defense minister's dismissal.
The Pride flag is the cabal's banner, rallied around in battle and raised over that which they have conquered.
Yes, unconstrained majorities are a threat to liberty. However, self-perpetuating oligarchies wielding powers that they unilaterally gave themselves to rewrite the laws as they see fit are utterly and fundamentally incompatible with the principles of self-government and the rule of law.
Among the revisions Netanyahu's coalition are proposing are 1) eliminating the Court's self-perpetuating nature in favor of appointment by elected representatives, and 2) requiring that judicial review by constrained by reference to actual provisions of Israel's Basic Laws, not free-floating principles invented by the Supreme Court.
If you are opposed to those parts of the reform, you are simply opposed to the very ideas of 1) self-government and 2) the rule of law.
There are bits of Netanyahu's reform I see as objectionable. But if it were enacted entirely as-is, it would still be a substantial improvement on Israel's status quo.
I think a lot of the problem comes from the fact that "Israel's Basic Laws" are a bit amorphous and subject to manipulation by the Knesset.
The problem is they don't have a constitution.
Drivel. There are arguments for making changes to Israel's judicial structure. None of those have anything to do with the totalitarian power grab by a failing PM.
It's sadly funny how quick people turn into authoritarians once they are in control.
Both of those takes elide the reality that untrammeled majority rule is a threat to civil liberties.
Because an unelected, unaccountable committee of elites is always the surest guarantor of individual liberty. The Israeli judiciary is literally demanding they continue to be able to select their own successors without interference from that pesky electorate.
And had Bibi and his majority simply addressed that particular issue, I don't believe there would be any meaningful pushback. I think the fact you have competing totalitarian positions, mob rule vs. unelected supreme authority, is the main problem.
It would be better if the Knesset's attempt at modification maintained some level or power and autonomy of the judiciary, but reigned in the absolutist position it now seems to be taking.
Courts should be deciding who’s guilty and who’s innocent, and judges should make sure court procedures follow the rule of law. It’s the legislature’s job to decide what legislation says.
If they were clear about that, half the lawyers would be out of business.
Democracy Dies
In these United States, democracy is dying. It is committing suicide as it tends to do, leaving in its wake socialistic Fascism.
“Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.” -President John Adams (1735-1826)
As described in the novel, Retribution Fever, to the Founding Fathers, the word. democracy, itself represented an obscenity. Their vision was of a democratic republic not a republican democracy. There is a difference and it is huge.
Can we resurrect that vision? Yes. The novel offers a scientifically-based blueprint how. The Chinese Communists/Fascists are employing that science successfully to fulfill goals often hostile to the vision. They are winning. We are losing. We can employ it, too, to promote the vision; otherwise, socialistic Fascism here we come.
https://www.nationonfire.com/winston-churchill/ .
Oh, yeah. The first is government by the district of the people's thing. The second is the people's thing, government by the district.
Then we must commit ourselves to ridding America of it’s leftists. Which requires the destruction of the democrat party. We can either have the left, or a functioning constitutional republic, not both.
*dramatic sighing*
Look, most of the rest of the world has a parliamentary system, whereby the legislature is supreme. Our ideas of speration of power cannot be directly adapted overseas. As it stands, reforming the judicial to not be self run (and restraining judicial review) is actually pretty good.
There's no such thing as an independent judiciary, unless the judiciary were in control of another country, or robots, or space aliens. So I don't think this supposed separation of powers is as big a deal as you think. If the people have the power to completely abolish their government, surely they have the lesser power to alter any detail of it.
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