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Israel's Judicial Reform

by Johannes Sosada

Despite massive opposition, the Knesset passes a core element of the controversial judicial reform

On July 24, the right-wing coalition government, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, voted to abolish the so-called “reasonableness clause”. Until now, the clause allowed the court to declare government decisions, or even the appointment of ministers, as "unreasonable" and thus prevent them. The opposition boycotted the vote and left the plenary amid loud protest - symbolically the vote went 64:0. Now, the passed law, which is a core element of the controversial judicial reform, restricts the Israeli Supreme Court's ability to act.

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Dr. Beatrice Gorawantschy

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Johannes Sosada

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Research Fellow

johannes.sosada@kas.de +972 (0) 2 567 1830 +972 (0) 2 567 1831
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