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Israeli Parliament Passes Law Limiting Judicial "Reasonableness" Review of Government Policies
The new law is probably the least objectionable part of the right-wing government's attack on judicial review in Israel.

Today, Israel's parliament, the Knesset, enacted a law severely limiting judicial "reasonableness" review of government policy. The new law bars reasonableness review of policies enacted by the national cabinet and by individual ministers, but leaves it in place for policies adopted by lower-level government officials and municipal governments.
The new law is the least problematic element of the right-wing government's broader plan to essentially gut judicial review in Israel. Reasonableness review enables the Supreme Court to overturn a wide range of executive policies if it concludes they are "extremely unreasonable." For example, earlier this year, the Court blocked the government's plan to appoint Shas Party leader Aryeh Deri, to the positions of interior minister and health minister, because of a conviction for tax offenses arising from a plea bargain agreement in which he apparently promised to stay out of public office.
Critics of "reasonableness" review argue that it's an amorphous standard easily abused by judges. It goes well beyond practices in most other constitutional democracies. While there are some similarities to US "rational basis" review, the latter is far more deferential. The Israeli test is somewhat more akin to various types of heightened scrutiny that in US jurisprudence are usually reserved for government policies that threaten fundamental rights or discriminate on the basis of suspect classifications, such as race, gender, or religion.
Unlike the rest of the Israeli government's judicial reform plan, constraining reasonableness review probably poses only a minor danger to important individual rights. The latter are - for now - still protected by judicial enforcement of the various rights specifically guaranteed by Israel's Basic Laws.
I am not convinced that "reasonableness review" should be as sweeping as it was prior to today's reform. In some cases, it verges on dubious judicial policymaking. Consider, for example, this list of policy decisions the Supreme Court overturned as "extremely unreasonable," compiled by Israeli legal scholar Amichai Cohen (a supporter of reasonableness review):
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The decision by the minister of defense not to install protection against rocket attacks in all classrooms in the city of Sderot, and instead to retain the system of common "protective spaces" despite the immediate danger to students (2007).[8]
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The decision not to automatically recognize doctoral degrees issued by foreign universities, ignoring the fact that many students had relied on previous decisions by the Ministry of Education when they began their studies (2005).
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The decision to suspend the decision of the minister of finance, according to which full-time Kollel (yeshiva) students would lose subsidies for daycare for their children, without giving Haredi families sufficient time to make alternative arrangements (2022).[9]
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The decision not to construct a ritual bath (mikve) for women in the town of Kfar Vradim (2014).[10]
Several of these decisions seem right on policy or moral grounds. But I have serious doubts whether any of these issues are the kind well-suited to judicial resolution based on a very vague standard.
Given the highly centralized nature of Israeli government, which has very few checks and balances other than judicial review, I think some kind of more limited "reasonableness" review of executive policies may be justifiable. But, ideally, it would be less expansive than the system in place before today, and focus on specifically enumerated types of abuses of power.
If the right-wing government's judicial reform agenda were limited to the law enacted today, there would only be modest cause for concern. But it goes far beyond that, and would - if fully enacted - gut judicial review and gravely threaten individual rights, especially for Israel's many minority groups. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently told US media that he plans to scrap the "override" clause enabling the Knesset to overturn judicial decisions with a simple majority vote. But various right-wing elements of his coalition are trying to force him to reverse himself on that issue. They may succeed, since Netanyahu can't stay in power without their support.
In previous posts, I outlined the reasons why I oppose the right-wing government's attack on judicial review, and how this is consistent with my opposition to left-wing proposals to undermine judicial review in the US. In the latter post, I also responded to various arguments for differentiating the two cases, such as claims that Israeli judicial review is illegitimate because Israel does not have a written constitution. Some commentators on both right and left have taken inconsistent stances on the Israeli and US cases. Here, as elsewhere, partisan and ideological commitments often trump long-term institutional principles.
Left-wing Americans who (justifiably) condemn Netanyahu's plan, but favor gutting judicial review in this county, should ask themselves whether they really want the next right-wing Republican president to be free of judicial constraints. They might also consider whether it would have been a good thing if Donald Trump had been able to successfully defy judicial rulings against his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
While I oppose the right-wing government's plans, I have also argued (as have many experts in both Israel and the US), that Israel would do well to develop stronger non-judicial checks on centralized government power, such as systems of federalism and separation of powers. It's dangerous to put too many eggs in the vulnerable judicial basket. Israel should also adopt a written constitution that clearly elevates fundamental rights and structural constraints on state power above ordinary legislation, and puts judicial review on a firm foundation.
There is in fact a long history of Israeli proposals for a written constitution, including a recent call to draft one by opposition leader and former prime minister Yair Lapid. But the idea seems unlikely to come to fruition anytime soon.
In the meantime, it is probable that severe conflict over judicial reform is going to continue in Israel. The government seems intent on pursuing at least some of the more radical elements of its agenda, and opponents have responded with massive protests- among the biggest in Israeli history, and various strikes and disruptions. I hope the government fails in its efforts, and that the conflict over its dangerous policies does not cause too much harm.
UPDATE: I should note that, in suggesting that Israel would do well to adopt a written constitution, federalism, and separation of powers, I do not mean to suggest that these structures should be the same as those in the US. While extreme centralization and concentration of government power is a bad idea for both countries, it doesn't follow that they should adopt identical (or very similar) approaches to limiting and decentralizing it.
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The obvious answer is for Israel to adopt a Bill of Rights, and limit judicial review to actions that violate same.
That essentially already exists today. The combination of two Basic Laws - Basic Law: HUMAN DIGNITY AND LIBERTY (https://www.ilo.org/dyn/natlex/docs/ELECTRONIC/39134/97918/F1548030279/ISR39134.pdf) and Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation guarantee, among others things, freedom from bodily harm, freedom from imprisonment, arrest, extradition, property rights, freedom of travel, freedom of occupation etc...
Nothing in the change to the reasonableness standard affects any of these.
If that is the case(I am not disputing you, I just don't know), then much of the opposition is utterly disingenuous. The opposition has asserted that this law would make it impossible to protect minority and human rights. Acc. to you, the Supreme Court of Israel can still review laws for violation of the Basic Laws.
That is indeed the case, and the opposition is indeed disingenuous. It may shock you (and Ilya) to find that large parts of the opposition had previously support this very same limitation on the "reasonableness" standard (Gideon Saar's party actually had it in its election platform) before it became a convenient stick to beat the coalition with. It's politics, nothing to do with legal principles.
The left is arguing that the Israeli Supreme Court should be left alone because it is the only bulwark against the power of the executive branch, currently in the hands of the hated Netanyahu.
The left in the U.S. is arguing our Supreme Court must be reformed and curtailed or packed with Democrats because the current Court is limiting the power of the executive branch, currently in the hands of the beloved Biden.
At least the woke progressives are consistent - NOT!
The left in the US and the left in Israel barely resemble each other, but don't let that stop you.
They are actually not that dissimilar.
Lies. Ilya's lies are also lies. Biden has definitively rejected court packing. There's no proposal to "curtail" the court, whatever that even means. Ilya, one crazy guy suggesting that Biden disobey the court is hardly "the left." (Also, where's your outrage over Alabama, who actually is disobeying the court? I expect a snazzy headline like "The American Right Favors Gutting Judicial Review in the US!")
From what I've read of the proposed law, the least-objectionable part is reforming how members of the Supreme Court are selected. Currently, the Supreme Court essentially gets to select its own members, which is insane. That's an obvious fix. From what I've read, I'm less sanguine about the other reforms, but I'm no expert in Israeli law, so maybe those reforms are warranted.
Changing the selection process is also part of the broader planned reform.
To provide more details for those that haven't read up on it, here's the details (Courtesy Wikipedia, mostly):
Supreme Court Justices are chosen by the President of Israel from a list presented by the Judicial Selection Committee.
The JSC has nine members:
The Justice Minister
One cabinet Minister
Two Knesset Members, chosen by the Knesset (usually one from the gov't and one from the opposition)
Two members of the Bar Association
The Chief Justice, and two other judges of the Supreme Court
Any nominations require 7 votes of the 9 members to pass.
Right away, we see that the three current Justices are required to nominate anyone. They vote as a block, giving them an effective veto over any nomination.
In addition, the Bar members have supported the justices almost 100% until recently.
According to Wikipedia, this process has been criticized (and attempts to change it made) since the 1950s.
Agree with the last two comments.
Essentially the current situation is profoundly undemocratic, in which a self-perpetuating left wing court gets to overrule the democratically elected government and impose their more left wing version of society.
Left wingers have relied on the courts as a bulwark against democracy, to ensure that no matter what the results of an election are, they can count on sympathetic courts to simply overrule the government. The prospect that the courts may lose this power would leave them at the mercy of the great unwashed masses, which is very frightening.
It's almost an awkward situation, in that the campaign against judicial reform is at its core a campaign against democracy, and in favor of an enlightened oligarchy. This is being countered to some extent by simple double-speak, whereby the judicial reforms are just described as threats to democracy, even though they are the exact opposite.
One problem with maintaining the current system is that democracy, besides for being a value in its own right, is also valuable in preventing a lot of strife. At this time, the people in the streets are the left wing, trying to prevent the reforms by any means necessary. But if the reforms fail, then it could well be the opposite situation. Because it will have been made clear to rightist sympathizers that no matter how many elections they win, the ultimate control will remain in the hands of their ideological opponents. That does not contribute to civil harmony.
In theory, how is that different from the right in the US not trusting democracy either and using the electoral college and two-senators--per-state-regardless-of-population to thwart it?
In point of fact, neither the left nor the right trusts democracy, at least not entirely, and probably with good reason. But at least with an anti-democratic leftist court the government gets kicked out of your bedroom and your medical decisions, you have free speech, and there are limits on just how abusive the police are allowed to be.
Who knew the Founders were MAGA right wingers when they approved a Constitution providing for two Senators/state and an Electoral College to elect Presidents?
They were political pragmatists who recognized that there wouldn't be a United States without concessions to the rural states. Who knows what they would actually have considered good policy had they not been acting under those constraints?
It wasn't the "rural states" (most of the US at the time was rural with an economy based on agriculture), it was the smaller states such as Rhode Island, Connecticut, possibly New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland who fear the other larger states would soon outstrip them in population and sought to assure their equal place in the new government with equal representation in the Senate.
I think it's a matter of degree. The electoral college dilutes direct democracy to some extent, but it's not remotely close to the situation in Israel. There, the courts have total control, with the right to override the government on anything and everything based simply on the fact that they disagree with it. Further, they get to effectively appoint their own members, thereby guaranteeing that their absolute control will remain in perpetuity and is completely insulated from election results.
From your second paragraph it sounds like you simply like the idea of a left wing oligarchy. OK, though you can hopefully understand where others might prefer a different system. But beyond that, once you abandon democracy in favor of oligarchy, then you open the door for others to impose their own versions of oligarchy, which you might find extremely objectionable. You can look at democracy as a safeguard against that, and it might be worthwhile to be cautious about undermining the public commitment to the idea, even if at times it produces results that you disfavor.
I am generally more in sympathy with liberal positions, yes, but I think that a broadly interpreted bill of rights is far better policy than allowing the majority to use the state to impose its prejudices on others. Do you trust the majority to be equanimous toward minorities that it despises?
And you're right that that opens the door for others to impose their will through the judiciary if they have the ability to do so, but that will be true of any system.
The problem is bigger in two ways: first of all, Netanyahu's plan is to remake the judiciary into one which won't enforce the laws he has broken; secondly, the bigger trend is that the odious Haradim are continuing to increase because they think their god has ordered them not to get jobs, but to stay at home and breed, and read Torah while they recoup their sexual energy between bouts. So the cult of non-productivity and right-wingery will continue increasing exponentially (literally, exponentially; I'm not just using the word the way too many Americans do, to mean "very fast") over time, limited only by the children who manage to leave the cult.
Netanyahu is on trial , but so far has not been convicted of breaking any laws. Are you familiar with "innocent until proven guilty"? Regardless, nothing in the proposed reform has anything to do with the criminal justice system in Israel.
This Netanyahu-appointed former attorney-general disagrees.
Also, see this.
Did you actually read those links? There’s nothing in there that explains exactly how any changes related to the current proposals would help Netanyahu. Just a lot of hand waving about what might happen if some other changes are enacted, like a law that would retroactively eliminate the charges he is currently facing. Those other hypothetical things could happen with or without the proposed reform, which, as I worte, has nothing to do with the criminal justice system.
There’s no such thing as the “current” proposals. To defuse resistance, the changes are being voted on piecemeal, one at a time, with no guarantee which if any of the remaining previously discussed changes, including some of those in the linked articles, will ever make it to the floor of the Knesset. Assuming none of the ones mentioned will be proposed is exactly the effect the piecemeal legislating is meant to produce. That doesn’t mean they won’t happen.
There actually is such a thing. The current proposals include 4 elements- the first of which was passed (limiting "reasonableness"-based judicial review), and the other 3 are changing the selection process of judges, codifying the role of legal advisors as advisors whose opinion is not binding, and an override clause.
The "French law" is not on the table, nor is the fantasy of retroactively eliminating the breach of trust and fraud felonies.
As I wrote, those could be enacted, but they could be enacted with or without the current change.
Mmm-hmm.
The men of Harad are indeed odious, but the white fury of the Northmen will overcome them.
That Somin the "libertarian" yet again adopts the position and rhetoric of the far left on an issue will come as no surprise to any regular reader of this blog.
The concept of "judicial review" is oxymoronic in a nation, like Israel (or the United Kingdom), which has no written constitution. The Israeli Supreme Court was established in 1948. It discovered it possessed the power of judicial review in 1995 (what a venerable institution), simultaneously discovering that, as it turns out, Israel DID have a written constitution after all, in the form of the Basic Laws for the organization of the government passed by the First Knesset in 1950. It did not, however, choose to go hog-wild in utilizing the new power it had granted itself in an orgy of left-wing activism until recently.
While the U.S. Supreme Court is not democratic by design, at least its members are chosen by democratically elected officials, namely the President and the Senate. Not so in Israel, where new members of the court are chosen by a group consisting of members of the elected government, the Court itself, and the Israeli Bar Association, the latter two always voting as a bloc. If the U.S. adopted such a system, every justice would be a William Douglas or William Brennan.
This reform is long overdue.
"If the U.S. adopted such a system, every justice would be a William Douglas or William Brennan."
Why do you think this? Just curious.
If you think the process for appointing judges is the problem, perhaps they should be reforming that, rather than limiting their power to review government policy.
They are also proposing to reform the selections process. The two things are not mutually exclusive.
I realize that they aren't mutually exclusive, which is why I didn't say they were. I did not realize that they are proposing to reform the selection process, because it doesn't say that anywhere in the OP.
Wake up! Netanyahu wants to "reform" the judicial system to be gentle and forgiving when it judges him. The same thing Trump would do if he were to become President again. Republicans today want justices who are tough on crime except when the crime is committed by them.
these reforms were first formulated and proposed more than 10 years ago, long before Netanyahu was on trial. They also have no impact on the criminal justice system.
Some of the reforms were first proposed in 1953, when Netanyahu was a whopping 4 years old.
If you ever want a good example of conspiratorial thinking, this is it right here.
For sound economic perspective please go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Apparently it's not going over very well.
At least the police are using water-cannon, which is nice, on a hot day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0AGdflm3b4
"I should note that, in suggesting that Israel would do well to adopt a written constitution, federalism, and separation of powers,"
Federalism? In Israel? That makes zero sense, and it's clear Somin hasn't actually thought about it.
Federalism makes sense in a few different key situations.
1. Large, geographically diverse countries, where local needs may not be well understood by a national capital 1,000 miles away.
i.e. Brazil or Russia
2. Nations which are a union of two or more separate geo-cultural areas
i.e. Germany or Switzerland
3. Small island groupings, where the individual islands each are a "state" of the greater grouping, and have their own government.
i.e. Micronesia.
Israel fits none of those categories. It's smaller than the state of Massachusetts in area, there's no real distance issue. There are no separate geo-cultural areas* (see one-state discussion below)...it's an immigrant countries of Jews. And there are no islands. Israel has six "districts" but they have no elected councils or anything. A federal system in Israel (as opposed to their current unitary state) makes no sense.
---One state discussion--
There is a plausible argument for a federal system if Israel and Palestine were single country, where Israel was one state, the West Bank a separate state, and Gaza a third state. However, the one-state solution here is unacceptable to Israel. Doing this would give the Arabs a majority in the country. Where they would likely quickly use their majority status to deprive the Jews of their rights, and drive them from the country. Because of this, only a two-state solution is acceptable to Israel.
Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Jaffa, and the Galilee aren’t different culturally? Israel’s cultural communities have a significant amount of geographical segregation, even if they’re all living close to each other by American standards.
Come on, Connecticut and New York City each have at least as much cultural diversity as Israel (and a good bit more religious and racial diversity in the case of New York City), and no one proposes that a federal system would make sense for either of them. Imagine if every legal opinion contained a qualification: “We are admitted to practice only on the Lower East Side, and express no opinion as to the laws of any other neighborhood.” Somin’s proposal makes no sense. But if you have a hammer . . . .
What is the big deal?
Just like the US system, now in Israel, yhe legislature sets POLICY (not the courts) while the courts IMPLEMENTS that policy.
Judicial review of legislation and executive actions is definitely a thing in the US. At least in theory, it’s based on more specific grounds than general concepts of equity and reasonableness. But it’s judicial review all the same. In the U.S., its written constitution is regarded as setting super-policy, and the courts say they have the sole right to imterpret it and compare anything a legislature does against it. This in effect puts the judiciary above the legislature, at least sometimes.
Judicial review of legislation will still be a thing in Israel, too, after this law is passed - it will just have to be based on some actual legal argument base din law, not what a judge feels is unreasonable.
So are you like in Netanyahu’s family or what?
Yes, providing facts and evidence (instead of racist rants and dishonest attacks) is only done when someone is personally related to the politicians involved.
Did you think for even a second before you wrote this post, Sarcastro?
He’s big on the ipse dixit you don’t understand style of post. Not sure how you confused that with facts.
fact: Judicial review of legislation is still a thing in Israel, even w/o "reasonableness". Deal with it w/o ad hominem arguments, if you can.
No, but it is interesting that you jump to that baseless conclusion. I guess you have no substantial rebuttal or the ability to reason properly, or (likely) both.
That was not a serious question, of course. It was noting your many-posting, tribal devotion to Netanyahu, and your penchant for not really explaining, just contradicting.
Basically white-noise cheerleading. Maybe you're right, but you're not going to convince anyone posting like this.
I have done plenty of explaining in this thread (and elsewhere), starting with my first comment to Bored Lawyer comparing the BoR to Israel's basic laws.
You don't read very well , do you?
You have shown once again why I muted you. He explained it above.
It would be the same if SCOTUS ruled that federal courts cannot review federal or state laws for being "not reasonable" but can do so for violating the Bill of Rights or other enumerated rights. Which is what the state of the law is today in the US.
Unsourced ipse dixit:
"They are actually not that dissimilar."
"Changing the selection process is also part of the broader planned reform."
"nothing in the proposed reform has anything to do with the criminal justice system in Israel." [This one is playing games with the context of the proposed reform]
Seems to me like this guy has a rooting interest, is a bit loose with his argumentation and evidence, and there you have it.
No wonder you love him.
“Changing the selection process is also part of the broader planned reform” is a factual statement, and directly related to comments made here that this should have been done instead of , (or in addition. to) the limiting of the reasonableness standard. (if you need a source: https://www.timesofisrael.com/who-chooses-judges-the-evolution-and-planned-radical-overhaul-of-judicial-selection/ ) The person who made the comment that this was a response to conceded he did not know that was the case, because it is missing in Ilya’s OP. I have a rooting interest in seeign this reform pass, for reasons that have nothing to do with Netanyahu. When you learn to reason in a logical fashion, or at minimum, learn to read, we can have a discussion about those different concepts.