israeli politics

what luck! Yesterday I found a cardiologist I trust (3rd opinion) way up north and he recommended cardiac mapping.  I spent the afternoon trying to find out exactly where, and Ezi, at the click of a link, got me an appointment for tomorrow.  Apparently although the lines are long, the preparation complicated, and everyone is busy with the holidays so no one wants to go through a radioactive stress test.  Me, I’m happy for any chance to be relieved from the increasing exhaustion I’ve been suffering from for the past 3 years. 

cardiac tests – sept 13, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

While we wait anxiously for the high court to decide whether the ‘reasonableness’ clause is legal or not, knowing that whatever is decided there will be blood, the rest of my life doesn’t appear to be reasonable either.  After a long pulgrimage to a learned specialist who speculated that the extreme and agressive treatment I’ve been getting for the past three years may not have been a solution, but may well be part of the problem, I was sent on a search for a specific radiation stress test and only with Ezi’s help, found it.  Then made an appointment for thursday, and was confirmed for another test.  Now I can’t find out what happened – offices are closed.  It will be hard to plan the next few days …

So much for the personal – now for the general absurdity.  Dear Frances Raday wrote an opinion in the paper today:

Israel’s Supreme Court convened Tuesday to begin hearing an historic case asking it to nullify a law so contentious that it has plunged the country into crisis. The law abolishes the Court’s judicial review power over decisions of the Cabinet, prime minister and other ministers on grounds of unreasonableness.

 

The law, the first of the far-right government’s highly controversial judicial overhaul package of proposed laws aiming to weaken the court, has been the subject of much public and professional discussion, in which the claim of the government that judicial review on grounds of what is termed “reasonableness” does not apply in other democratic legal systems has been roundly refuted.

 

The law, if left in force, would severely curtail the power of the courts to review arbitrary government decisions on appointments and administrative policy. It would leave the government free to make corrupt decisions with impunity.

 
 

It is hard to conceive of any government which was committed to fair and ethical governance even making such a proposal to remove judicial review of its decisions on grounds of unreasonableness. But for the current government this is par for the course.

 
 

Furthermore, there is direct political expediency in its doing so. Nullifying the court’s power to strike down what it determines to be “unreasonable” has been used before by the court to block government decisions or appointments they view as corrupt or otherwise extremely unwise. This was the standard used by the court, for example, to bar the appointment of Netanyahu’s coalition partner, Arye Deri, to a ministerial post on grounds of his criminal convictions and his promise during sentencing in a criminal court that he intended to retire from public life.

 
President of the Supreme Court of Israel Esther Hayut and all fifteen justices assemble to hear petitions against the reasonableness standard law in Jerusalem, on Tuesday.
President of the Supreme Court of Israel Esther Hayut and all fifteen justices assemble to hear petitions against the reasonableness standard law in Jerusalem, on Tuesday.Credit: Debbie Hill/POOL via REUTERS

Beyond the substance of this particular law itself, the hearing is crucial as it’s the first in a series of judicial overhaul related laws at various stages of the legislative process, whose constitutionality has come up for review by the Supreme Court.

 

The president of the Supreme Court has created a historical precedent by including all 15 justices on the bench for this hearing. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has further accentuated the drama of the moment by intimating in a CNN interview that he might not abide by the decision of the court if it intervened to nullify the Law. The ambivalent statement of the Prime Minister suggests predictive contempt of court. Others in Netanyahu’s government, have been more blunt in their warnings, including Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana. He declared last week, “not every ruling by the Supreme Court must be honored.” Justice Minister Yariv Levin, the judicial overhaul’s architect, said the court “lacks all authority” to review the law.

 

The blatant threat by government not to abide by the decision of the Supreme Court would be far more serious than even contempt of court – an egregious act of governmental challenge to the judiciary as an independent branch of democratic governance.

 
 

The claim of the Israeli government that the Supreme Court cannot overrule laws which have been passed by the will of the people contradicts Israel’s commitment under its Declaration of Independence, its existing Basic Laws and under its international law obligations to respect and protect human rights.

 

This is a commitment which is not subject to the will of the majority but is, rather, a restriction on the power of the majority. Israel’s Knesset and government must themselves be restrained by this commitment, which is part and parcel of all democratic regimes and the implementation of which necessitates independent judicial review.

 
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Furthermore, the claim by the government that there is no power of judicial review over legislation which is in the form of a basic law, as is this particular law, is without merit. The labelling of a law a “basic law” (a quasi-constitutional law with supra-legal status, designed to deal with the principle institutions of the state and guarantees of human rights) does not require any special procedure or any special majority in the Knesset and so could be manipulatively used by government as a tool to preempt judicial review.

 
 

This looming confrontation between government and the court goes far beyond possible contempt of court. It puts in question the very foundations of Israeli constitutional democracy. It has already been emphasized repeatedly by political and legal commentators that Israel has weak protection for its democracy, as the executive and parliament are under direct control of the governing coalition and hence the judiciary is the sole independent branch with the power to review governmental decisions. This makes Israeli democracy uniquely vulnerable.

 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chairing the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chairing the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday.Credit: Ohad Zwigenberg /AP

The threatened defiance of the Supreme Court expressed by Netanyahu suggests that no means are inconceivable in his lust to secure for himself and his government absolute constitutional power.

 
 

The scenario which unfolds – should the Supreme Court declare the law on reasonableness nullified and should the government openly declare it will not abide by such a decision – is without precedent. A declaration of governmental defiance will, in itself, prompt conceptually a constitutional crisis. But it is not easy to predict the way in which the resulting constitutional crisis will unfold. The most likely development would be that the government would test the waters by taking a decision which would fall within previous Supreme Court’s decisions of what is considered “unreasonable” such as appointing Deri to a ministerial post.

 

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This could be followed by a court decision determining the invalidity of the appointment. If the government then persisted in maintaining the appointment, this might become a basis for prosecution of responsible ministers for contempt of court. However, such a prosecution would be subject to claims of parliamentary immunity. And then it’s an open book as to which measures could be taken by various watchdog institutions of Israeli democracy.

 

What is clear is that should the government be allowed to openly defy the Supreme Court, the institutional basis of the Israeli constitution would be autocracy and not democracy.

 

Frances Raday is the president of the Concord Research Center for Integration of International Law in Israel, The Haim Striks School of Law, College of Management; Professor of Law, Emerita, Hebrew University; Honorary Professor, University College, London; and Special Rapporteur, UN Human Rights Council, Expert Group on Discrimination against Women.

 

absurd – sept 12, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

This is Ezi’s mother, who posed for an ad about using canned goods in the time of rationing.  It made the papers this weekend again in a celebration of Lilian Kornfeld’s cookbook of Israeli Cookery, that was published over sixty years ago and is still available on Amazon.  

Ezi’s mother didn’t use canned goods, though.  She was Israeli born and Ezi grew up on soups from native herbs and vegetables, breaded fish and rice desserts.

I know the anniversary of an old cook book isn’t news, but she was a great person.

 

like mother used to make – sept 11, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics, , ,

Ionesco’s play about the disintegration of order and the reconciliation with death was very slightly altered by the Cameri to be a portrait of Bibi as a leader who refuses to die after the had caused the deconstruction of his kingdom.  Last month someone got up from the audience to protest this treason, but our audience was very positive.  Although I didn’t stay for the reception because I thought I  had left my glasses at Orit’s and I was terrified that I might have lost them on the street somewhere, I could feel the positive vibrations about the play throughout.

My glasses turned up.  Left them wrapped up in the shawl I was going to wear in the air conditioning.

But I had a feeling that my uneasiness might have been caused by something else.  And then I remembered an unpublished poem of mine on the subject:

Commencement, 1966

 

 New York Times:  ROCHESTER, April 14–Students and faculty at the University of Rochester have begun a drive to prevent former Vice President Richard M. Nixon from receiving an honorary degree when he delivers the university’s commencement address.

 

 

So Parish is asleep on the couch

and Steve is dancing with Friar’s wife-to-be

and me I am on the side taking pictures,

and feeling out of place, I head for home.

 

But dissatisfied and incomplete I go out again

to a party from my Shakespeare seminar

in a bar on Genesee Street

(In the apartment above that same bar

Mark and Gary and I used to read

Ionesco together and drink Leibfraumilch

and I had no idea the two of them

were beginning to fall in love.)

 

And it is a dreamy mid-summer’s eve

and I wind up kissing John Glossup

who would probably rather be kissing

Jennifer who he would soon marry

but she had already finished the year before

and we were a week away from graduation

and she was already teaching in Toronto.

 

And suddenly when Richard Nixon is speaking

at the ceremony we were not permitted to avoid

and my chair is tied to the graduate’s next to me

and my diploma is locked on the stage

pending acquiescence, it hits me

 

that the world I thought I knew would end not

with the all’s well that ends well of Shakespeare,

but the absurdist nonsense

of the play where nothing is resolved

and chairs fly off the stage, The Bald Soprano.

exit the king – sept 10, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

Demonstrations

 

1.

The feeling is not new.  We have been seeing

the move away from the country we had dreamed

as soon as it was created. Even before, when

Arlozorov muttered, “Jews did not kill Jews,”

days before he was shot. Kestner assassinated

because his heroism may have been understood

as selfish. Everyone is afraid of betrayal,

and for fear of the fear, betrays.

We fear each other too much

 to trust ourselves. 

 

  1.  

Here, on the streets of Tel Aviv,

facing the t-shirt of the back

of some anonymous protester,

we agree to be friends, beg pardon

as we move with our flags close

to the screens to hear the speaker,

joke with strangers about the heat,

unbearable but unfelt faced

with a country bound by laws

from the middle ages. 

 

3.

Half a block away from the crowds,

Some kid was kicking over the scooters

when an older guy stopped him

and threatened to call the cops.  the boy

went beserk and began to scream out curses

I hadn’t heard in ages.  The only one missing

was that he’d fuck the other guy’s mother.

And in the background was the chaos

of the demonstrations, the drums and whistles

piercing randomly and with growing force.

You have to be for or against, he feels, but

All he knows is the pain of uncertainty,

A house shaking on its foundations.

 

4.

“We’re right behind you,” she said,

A woman I had not seen in years

nor thought of, but suddenly embrace,

“We lost you in petty differences,

she says, “but now we are one people.”

I turn to her, sweaty, breathless.

I never dreamt this day would come.

 

5.

And what of the others?  My comrades

who have left the country in desperation?

Could we bring them back?  My heart aches

for each work of art not created in this land

that spat out anyone not following the path.

Suddenly I see the possibility of room

for all tongues, colors, ways of life,

for a land that restores hope for all.

 

6.

But then my mind returns to Tennyson

“So runs my dream: but what am I?
    An infant crying in the night:
    An infant crying for the light:
And with no language but a cry.”

He could afford it

 

 

 

 

 

 

Demonstrations

 

1.

The feeling is not new.  We have been seeing

the move away from the country we had dreamed

as soon as it was created. Even before, when

Arlozorov muttered, “Jews did not kill Jews,”

days before he was shot. Kestner assassinated

because his heroism may have been understood

as selfish. Everyone is afraid of betrayal,

and for fear of the fear, betrays.

We fear each other too much

 to trust ourselves. 

 

  1.  

Here, on the streets of Tel Aviv,

facing the t-shirt of the back

of some anonymous protester,

we agree to be friends, beg pardon

as we move with our flags close

to the screens to hear the speaker,

joke with strangers about the heat,

unbearable but unfelt faced

with a country bound by laws

from the middle ages. 

 

3.

Half a block away from the crowds,

Some kid was kicking over the scooters

when an older guy stopped him

and threatened to call the cops.  the boy

went beserk and began to scream out curses

I hadn’t heard in ages.  The only one missing

was that he’d fuck the other guy’s mother.

And in the background was the chaos

of the demonstrations, the drums and whistles

piercing randomly and with growing force.

You have to be for or against, he feels, but

All he knows is the pain of uncertainty,

A house shaking on its foundations.

 

4.

“We’re right behind you,” she said,

A woman I had not seen in years

nor thought of, but suddenly embrace,

“We lost you in petty differences,

she says, “but now we are one people.”

I turn to her, sweaty, breathless.

I never dreamt this day would come.

 

5.

And what of the others?  My comrades

who have left the country in desperation?

Could we bring them back?  My heart aches

for each work of art not created in this land

that spat out anyone not following the path.

Suddenly I see the possibility of room

for all tongues, colors, ways of life,

for a land that restores hope for all.

 

6.

But then my mind returns to Tennyson

“So runs my dream: but what am I?
    An infant crying in the night:
    An infant crying for the light:
And with no language but a cry.”

He could afford it

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

demonstrations 1rst draft – sept 9, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

Tonight we have to prove to the government that we have to be reckoned with, not just threatened. The curses, dismissals and threats will not work, even though they have frightened away numerous people. This is the moment to stand up.

Critical Saturday Read Post »

israeli politics, ,

“meet you at the demonstration,”  we’ve been saying to each other.  After all, it’s such a busy time with the holidays that we have no possibility of getting together with friends otherwise.  And yet who can demur?  What with the threats the courts are getting warning that they must not dare rule against the cancellation of the law of “reasonableness,” we’re facing chaos either way.  And the chaos the government is threatening is less attractive than the chaos of mutiny we’re already beginning to experience.  

The whole thing comes down to the definition of democracy.  The right is saying they won the election and therefore can do whatever they want.  The others are saying a government has responsibility for the entire population.  And right now there is no way this government would be voted in anyway.  So I’ll take some extra heart medication, gird up my loins, miss my favorite poetry workshop again, and do my duty to the country.  See you there.

meet you at the demonstration Read Post »

israeli politics

the sound of the shofar surprises

in the high end shopping mall

 Lululemon shoppers stop

sliding the hangers bearing rows of tights

each one the cost of a week’s refugee rations

as the clear long call fills the air.

 

Then the broken notes make me remember

how fragmented is my awareness

how I recall my sins and good deeds together 

and don’t always know which

is which.

 

The last call comes as I descend the stairs

to the garage and my car.  

the mall has become a house of prayer.

 

 

prayers – sept-6-2023 Read Post »