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Tens of thousands protest overhaul for 21st weekend, but turnout remains lower

Tens of thousands of people demonstrated nationwide against the government’s judicial overhaul plan for the 21st week on Saturday night, days after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the legislation would return to the agenda following the recent passage of the contentious state budget.

After several weeks of demonstrations that focused on issues beyond the overhaul itself, including the budget and equality, protest organizers returned to focusing on the coalition’s desire to radically curb the High Court of Justice’s power.

Protests were staged across the country, with the main demonstration taking place on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv. Channel 13 reported that some 70,000 were at the rally, citing the CrowdSolutions tech firm, while Channel 12 reported some 85,000. But turnout was once again lower than in the past, similarly to last week. Previous demonstration have drawn twice and thrice that number.

Speakers at the event includes former defense minister Moshe Ya’alon, protest leader Shikma Bressler and Shay Bramson of Havruta, an organization that works with religiously-observant members of the LGBTQ+ community.

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Thousands also participated in rallies in Jerusalem, Beersheba, Ra’anana, Kfar Saba, Netanya, Hod Hasharon, Ness Ziona, Rehovot, Zichron Ya’akov, Karmiel, and Karkur.

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— Ben Caspit בן כספית (@BenCaspit) May 27, 2023

Labor chair Merav Michaeli was the main speaker at the Karkur rally, attended by roughly 2,000 people, according to the Ynet news site. Toward the end of her remarks, some members of the crowd began to heckle Michaeli, blaming her for Labor’s deterioration in the polls, with many surveys showing it would not win any Knesset seats if elections were held today.

Protest organizers later apologized to her for the disruption, and Michaeli issued a statement saying she remained committed to the political path she has chosen.

Addressing the rally in Ness Ziona, former IDF chief of staff Dan Halutz claimed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seeking to “establish a dictatorship” in Israel. “We will not allow it to happen.”

At the Haifa protest, attended by several thousand, one participant told the Haaretz daily that a police officer ordered her to take down her sign, which had a drawing of a Palestinian flag on it. Palestinian flags are not illegal but police are given broad discretion to remove them at protests. The coalition is also seeking to advance legislation that would ban Palestinian flags.

Protest organizers said Saturday’s rallies would be held around the country “after Netanyahu himself admitted we are facing a dictatorship.”

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— Dan Kotliar ➡️ @[email protected] (@DanKotliar) May 27, 2023

In an interview with Channel 12’s “Meet the Press” Saturday, Gadi Eisenkot, a former IDF chief of staff and a senior member of the opposition’s National Unity party, praised President Isaac Herzog’s efforts in compromise talks he is leading, but said the lack of progress demanded a new way forward.

“My personal position is that after two months of negotiations, we need to do what is best for the State of Israel, and that is take away the gun from the table for at least one year,” he said, meaning the legislation plans should be paused for that period.

Eisenkot outlined a process he said should start from June 15, including the appointment of “an agreed public committee” to come up with a reform within a year’s time.

File: MK Gadi Eisenkot attends a discussion at the Knesset in Jerusalem, on November 22, 2022. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)

The centerpiece of the overhaul is legislation that would give governing coalitions extensive control over the overwhelming majority of judicial appointments in Israel, by giving the coalition an in-built majority on the Judicial Selection Committee.

The bill is on the cusp of being passed into law, and can be brought for its final, back-to-back votes in the Knesset plenum at a moment’s notice.

However, such action is almost sure to lead to a resumption of intense public unrest, the likes of which was last seen before the legislation was frozen in late March to make way for compromise talks.

Meanwhile, protest leaders on Friday called on New York City’s Celebrate Israel Parade, set to take place June 4, to cancel the participation of Israeli government ministers.

Hundrds of protesters gathered near Netanyahu’s Jerusalem residence to highlight the apparently faltering relationship with the US.

Demonstrators waved Israeli and US flags while charging that Netanyahu is distancing the country’s top ally even as arch-foe Iran rushes to obtain nuclear weapons.

Protesters against the government’s judicial overhaul, outside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence in Jerusalem, on May 25, 2023 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Unusually, Washington has yet to invite Netanyahu for an official visit since he formed his coalition of right-wing, religious and far-right parties at the end of last year. The US has raised concerns over comments by far-right elements of the government and over the coalition’s planned overhaul of the judiciary.

Minor scuffles broke out between police and demonstrators.

The Israel Police said it had pushed back the several hundred protesters after they came within the buffer zone around the residence on the capital’s Gaza Street and ignored instructions to clear the road. Two protesters were detained and taken for questioning.

While the demonstrators have so far focused on opposing the government’s planned overhaul, they have also turned attention in recent weeks to the huge allocations of money given to coalition parties as part of the latest budget.

Thousands rallied in Jerusalem on Tuesday as the Knesset convened to vote on the budget, with protesters accusing the government of “looting” the state’s money in an attempt to keep his coalition together.

Last week, a key architect of the judicial plans said the coalition will go back to advancing bills in the package during the current Knesset term, even if no agreements are reached in the compromise talks.

Religious Zionism MK Simcha Rothman, the chairman of the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, told Channel 12 that one such law could be the highly divisive bill to grant coalition politicians almost exclusive control over appointing judges.

Critics say the overhaul will sap the High Court of Justice of its power to act as a check and balance against parliament, dangerously eroding Israel’s democratic character. Supporters say the legislation is needed to rein in what they see as an over-intrusive court system.

According to an unsourced Wednesday report, Netanyahu will pursue shakeups of the State Attorney’s Office and the Attorney General’s Office if his coalition’s negotiations with the opposition on judicial reform fall apart.