A threat to Israel's democracy? Ahmad Gharabli/AFP/Getty Images

Given the headlines this week, youād be forgiven for thinking Israel was on the brink of civil war. In Tel Aviv, on Wednesday, thousands of anti-government protesters were met with water cannons and stun grenades in a clash with police. This āday of disruptionā followed eight weeks of protests against prime minister Binyamin Netanyahuās plans to reform the Supreme Court. In the eyes of the Western media, courageous liberals are fighting to stop Israelās democracy from sliding into an autocracy.
Reports of the demise of Israeli democracy are, however, greatly exaggerated. The proposed changes relate to the balance of power between the judiciary, the legislative and the executive branches of government ā a matter of usually staid debate among Israeli academics and wonks for nearly three decades. Todayās incendiary rhetoric on the issue says more about the vicious and polarised state of Israeli politics than the controversiality of the Supreme Court reforms.
The protest movement should be seen in the context of ongoing political opposition to Netanyahu. The leading activists resisting the reforms today are the same groups who participated in weekly demonstrations calling on him to resign in 2020 and 2021. Back then, they were motivated by the prime ministerās corruption charges, not by the scepter of drastic changes to the judiciary, but the new protests have piggy-backed onto the old ones.
Whatās at stake here isnāt the death of the nationās democracy, but straightforward party politics. And two incidents that took place last week in the Knesset plenum, Israelās legislature, illustrate just how ugly everyday Israeli politics has become. During a late night of debating and voting last week, Almog Cohen, a politician from the extremist party Otzma Yehudit, started a live video on Facebook from the plenum, in which he randomly insulted opposition members. āYou have to speak to him in his language, like a sheep,ā he said of one, making clicking noises at him as if summoning an animal. āShe has the voice of a woman who mops floors,ā he said about another. He then shouted at a politician who is a medical doctor: āI wouldnāt even let you care for my dog.ā
Cohen has since expressed regret. But his was an extreme case in a flood of insulting remarks on all sides. One opposition politician compared the current government to Nazis, and another said that Jews of Moroccan origin, who stereotypically support Netanyahu, would rather go back to living under a king than keep Israel a democracy.
That same night, Boaz Toporovsky, prominent in the opposition party Yesh Atid, returned to the Knesset after missing a month of work after being injured in a car crash. He was there to join his colleagues in voting against part of the judicial reform legislative package. Justice Minister Yariv Levin, the reform’s chief proponent, interrupted his presentation of the Bill from the podium to welcome back Toporovsky, saying: “We missed you.” Netanyahu rose from his seat in the plenum to greet Toporosky and shake his hand. Opposition and governing coalition lawmakers followed suit, standing in a cluster around their friend, who was in a neck brace. The moment of collegiality was caught on camera and published widely.
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