Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new hard-right Israeli government unveiled a plan that would allow parliament to overturn some Supreme Court rulings and grant the government more say in nominations to the bench, writes Reuters.
Justice Minister Yariv Levin’s announcement had been expected and appeared likely to raise concerns at home and abroad for Israel"s democratic health while sharpening feuding with the centre-left opposition in the Knesset.
“These reforms will strengthen the judicial system and restore public faith in it. People we did not vote for decide for us. That’s not democracy.
Proposed measures would change the way judges are appointed by giving the Knesset more oversight and the government more power on the committee which selects them.
It would also reduce the power of the Supreme Court to strike down Knesset laws by giving the 120-member parliament the power to override some of its rulings by a 61-seat majority, unless those rulings are unanimous”, - Levin said.