TEL AVIV: Tens of thousands of protestors on Saturday flocked to Tel Aviv and cities across Israel against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plans to tighten controls on the Supreme Court, ahead of the Jewish state’s independence day marking 75 years since its establishment.
The far-right government was last month compelled to pause its plans in the face of massive strikes and demonstrations.
Protestors in Tel Aviv carried banners with the words “Crime Minister” overlaid on Netanyahu’s face in Saturday’s demonstration, the latest in a series of weekly actions since the start of the year.
The proposals by Netanyahu’s hardline government would give it effective control over appointment of judges in the Supreme Court and allow parliament to overrule several decisions of the top court as well as limit the latter’s ability to review laws.
The government accuses activist judges of increasingly attempting to seize the role of parliament, and says the overhaul is imperative to restore balance between the elected politicians and judiciary.
However, critics are of the view that weakening the Supreme Court will hamper the country’s system of checks and balances and hand unchecked power to the government.
Outrage against Netanyahu’s govt
The proposals by Netanyahu’s far-right government have led to one of the biggest domestic crises in Israel’s recent history, galvanising people across the country.
High-tech business leaders and the security establishment have condemned the plans, with thousands of officers in elite reserve units of the military threatening to not report for duty.
Trade unions have also called for a general strike.
At the international front, the United States, Israel’s most crucial ally, has also publicly rebuffed the plans, with President Joe Biden telling Netanyahu that he “cannot continue down this road”.