In January, MQG petitioned the Supreme
Court asking the justices to ban newly sworn in Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu from serving in office. MQG argued that, with all due
respect to the 2.4 million Israelis who voted for Netanyahu, as a
criminal defendant, Netanyahu is legally “incapacitated” from performing
his duties in office and, therefore, the Supreme Court should order
Attorney General Gali Baharav Miara to declare Netanyahu “incapacitated”
and oust him from power.
MQG’s petition was ridiculous on its face.
The Supreme Court ruled in an 11-0 judgment in March 2020 that
Netanyahu may serve as prime minister while standing trial.
Israel’s Basic Law: The Government
stipulates that a prime minister can only be compelled to leave office
if he has been convicted of criminal charges, and even then, only after
he has exhausted all appeals.
Until the MQG submitted its petition, the
incapacitation clause of the law was understood to refer only to
physical or mental incapacitation. Moreover, no law empowers the
attorney general to deem the prime minister incapacitated. That power
was vested in Israel’s elected leaders in the government and Knesset.
All the same, the justices agreed to adjudicate the petition.
Baharav Miara also didn’t reject the
notion that she has the power to oust the prime minister. Instead, the
attorney general installed by the previous government and still acting
on its behalf to paralyze the Netanyahu government claimed that
Netanyahu cannot be deemed incapacitated so long as he upholds the
conflict-of-interest agreement he signed upon entering office. Baharav
Miara insisted the agreement bars Netanyahu from dealing with judicial
reform. By implication, Baharav Miara intimated that the converse was
also true.
Immediately after Baharav Miara expressed
that position, Coalition Leader MK Ofir Katz (Likud), submitted a bill
to amend Basic Law: The Government to explicitly prevent Baharav Miara
from ousting Netanyahu from power and thus overturning the elections.
Katz’s draft bill, which was passed in March, made explicit what until
then had merely been understood: The prime minister may only be deemed
incapacitated if he is physically or mentally incapable of continuing to
fulfill his duties. The power to make such a determination lies not
with the unelected attorney general, but with Israel’s elected
leaders—the government and the Knesset. The amended law stipulates that
three-fourths of the government and two-thirds of the Knesset must
support such a determination in order to oust the elected leader of the
country from power.
While Katz’s bill made its way through the
Knesset, Netanyahu studiously avoided all involvement in his
government’s central effort on judicial reform. His absence left a
leadership vacuum that arguably doomed the government’s first effort to
pass its judicial reform agenda. Without Netanyahu at the helm, a
handful of Likud MKs led by Defense Minister Yoav Gallant lost their
nerve in the face of the Left’s riots and indicated that they would vote
against judicial reform.
Immediately after the Knesset passed the
amendment to the Basic Law, Netanyahu reasserted his leadership. His
move played a significant role in the coalition’s successful passage of
its first judicial reform bill in June.
For its part, MQG quickly submitted a new
petition to the Supreme Court asking the justices to abrogate the
amendment to Basic Law: The Government and empower Baharav Miara to oust
Netanyahu.
If there was any doubt regarding Baharav
Miara’s intentions, her reaction to the legislation’s passage dispelled
them. Baharav Miara penned a letter to the Court supporting the
abrogation of the amendment to the Basic Law. Her behavior showed that
if the Court abrogates the amendment, Baharav Miara will either oust
Netanyahu by declaring him incapacitated or use her power to unseat him
at any time to force Netanyahu to abandon his government’s judicial
reform plans. Either way, Baharav Miara obviously plans to nullify the
results of the Nov. 1 elections.
Here is the place to note that MQG’s
petition has no legal basis. The Supreme Court has no legal authority to
abrogate or change Basic Laws. Indeed, there is no law that permits the
Supreme Court to abrogate regular laws.
In 1995, then-Supreme Court President
Aharon Barak seized the power to overturn duly promulgated laws of the
Knesset. Barak argued that the source of the Court’s authority was Basic
Law: Human Dignity and Liberty from 1992. Barak proclaimed in that
judgment that the Knesset is not merely a parliament, it is Israel’s
“Constitutive Authority.”
Barak asserted that the Knesset’s Basic
Laws are actually Israel’s constitution. Every Basic Law is part of that
constitution. After inventing a constitution out of whole cloth, Barak
declared that the Basic Laws are the source of the Supreme Court’s
authority to abrogate laws that are not Basic Laws.
In order to empower Baharav Miara to
overturn the elections by ousting Netanyahu from office, the justices
now need to figure out how to assert the power to abrogate what they
have long insisted is the source of their authority—the Basic Laws.
As he did with his 1995 judgment, this
week Barak published an article in an online legal journal in which he
provided what he argues is the basis for the Court’s new power to
abrogate Basic Laws—that is, to abrogate what he himself proclaimed is
the source of the Court’s authority.
Barak predicated his new constitutional
hijinks on the introduction of Israel’s Declaration of Independence as
the new “super-constitutional,” primordial source of all powers.
As Akiva Bigman noted in an analysis of Barak’s article published in Mida
online magazine Wednesday, David Ben-Gurion and his colleagues who
signed the Declaration of Independence on May 15, 1948 made clear that
the document was political and declarative. Its purpose was to formalize
Israel’s transition from colonial status under the British Mandatory
government to a newly sovereign and independent state. It was not to
determine the constitutional regime under which the new State of Israel
would be governed. Notably, while the Declaration declared Israel a
Jewish state, the word “democratic” never appeared in the text.
All the same, Barak wrote that the
Declaration of Independence set out “the principles on which the expanse
of the Knesset’s powers as the constitutive assembly must be
interpreted.”
Barak wrote, “Our approach”—that is, the
approach of the justices—is to view “the Declaration of Independence as
the external source of the Basic Laws and, on its basis, limits can be
placed on the expanse of the Knesset’s powers as the primary
constitutive assembly.”
According to Barak, the Declaration’s
aspirational proclamation, “The State of Israel will provide equal
social and political rights to all its citizens without regard to
religion, race or sex” is the super-constitutional basis for the
Knesset’s constitutive powers. Supreme Court justices have the power to
overturn or limit the Knesset’s constitutive powers if they decide that
its Basic Laws undermine this declaration.
Barak dispensed with the fact that the
Declaration makes no mention of democracy by proclaiming that the
Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Declaration “has emphasized over
and over Israel’s identity as a Jewish and democratic state.”
As Bigman showed, Barak then moved to the
Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty. Barak himself wrote the law, which
the Knesset passed with barely a quorum present in 1992. The law, which
includes flowery language about rights and dignity, struck most
lawmakers as nothing more than verbiage with no substantive
implications. That is why barely anyone showed up to vote on it.
Barak had other plans. Beginning in 1992,
he used that Basic Law as the basis of his judicial revolution, which
saw the Supreme Court seizing the power to legislate and dictate
policies from the bench while accepting no limits—aside from Basic
Laws—on its powers.
In his article, Barak insisted that his Basic Law is no mere Basic Law.
“If the Declaration of Independence is the
State of Israel’s ‘Birth Certificate’ … then its values as a Jewish and
democratic state [as expressed in Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom]
are its high school diploma. These two certificates determine the rules
the Knesset as the primary constitutive authority is prohibited from
deviating from.”
Barak then proclaimed that through its
interpretation of the Declaration of Independence and Basic Law: Human
Dignity and Liberty, the Court is empowered to abrogate Basic Laws.
Indeed, “This is not only the Court’s right, it is its duty. The Court
is not permitted to release itself from this obligation. The Court must
not permit the People’s Will to turn into a dead letter,” Barak exhorted
his disciples on the current Court.
Barak has long insisted that he and his
disciples are the custodians of Israel’s “enlightened” values. Far from
mere judges, they are Platonic Guardians. But how enlightened are they
really?
Supreme Court President Esther Hayut is
set to retire on Oct. 15. According to the Court’s “seniority rule” for
selection of its presidents, Hayut’s successor is supposed to be Justice
Yitzhak Amit. Last Friday, Maariv investigative reporter
Kalman Liebskind reported that, in breach of Amit’s conflict of interest
agreement, Amit has repeatedly adjudicated court cases involving
Israel’s International Bank, of which his brother Dov Goldfreund is a
director. He has also adjudicated a major case directly impacting Dor
Alon Energy, of which his brother-in-law Israel Yaniv serves as
chairman.
Amit’s behavior bespeaks contempt for the
ethical rules that apply to all public servants. Amit is not alone.
Hayut was also found to have repeatedly adjudicated cases that involved
insurance companies her husband represented. Barak himself has been
credibly accused of exploiting his position during his tenure as Supreme
Court president to advance his family’s financial interests.
In other words, the justices Barak insists
are the guardians of the “People’s Will” believe the ethical standards
politicians are held to don’t apply to them.
All the same, if everything goes as
expected, in the coming weeks, acting on Barak’s new orders, these
ethically challenged, self-selected men and women will seize what is
left of the Knesset’s sovereign powers and empower an unelected attorney
general hostile to Netanyahu and his government to effectively cancel
the votes of 2.4 million Israelis by ousting Netanyahu from power.
How events will proceed is unknowable.
Levin penned a letter to Baharav Miara Wednesday exposing her
incompetence and failure to carry out any of her statutory duties. Many
commentators speculated that his letter may form the basis of a
government decision to fire her.
Also Wednesday, Associate Justice Yosef
Elron stunned his colleagues by challenging the seniority rule by
presenting himself as a candidate to succeed Hayut instead of Amit.
These events or others that have yet to happen may shake Hayut’s belief
in her own invincibility and force her and her colleagues to step away
from the brink. Or things may go on as expected and she and her
underlings may formally destroy the last vestiges of Israeli democracy.
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