What is the judicial reform relating to the freedom of the judiciary to make any decision on anything? What limits do Israel’s Supreme Court have? Can they decide if and when and where the army should fight?
Your question touches on the
core issue behind Israel’s judicial reform debate:
How much power should the Supreme Court have compared to the elected government?
I’ll break it down clearly.
- What the Judicial Reform Debate Is About
The judicial reform proposed by the Israeli government (starting in
2023) was meant to
limit the power of the Supreme Court and increase the power of the elected government and Knesset.
Major proposed changes included:
- Limiting judicial review
- Giving the government more control over appointing judges
- Allowing the Knesset to override Supreme Court decisions
- Restricting the court’s use of the “reasonableness doctrine”
Supporters say this would
restore democratic control.
Opponents say it would
remove checks and balances.
- The “Reasonableness Doctrine”
A major part of the reform debate concerns the
reasonableness standard.
This doctrine allows courts to overturn government decisions if they are
extremely unreasonable—meaning the government ignored relevant considerations or acted irrationally.
Example situations where it has been used:
- Government appointments involving corruption
- Decisions that ignore legal obligations
- Administrative decisions that violate rights
In
July 2023, the Knesset passed a law to
limit the court’s ability to use this doctrine against government decisions.
In
January 2024, the Supreme Court struck that law down.
- What Powers the Israeli Supreme Court Actually Has
Israel’s Supreme Court has two main roles:
- Highest court of appeals
It hears appeals from lower courts.
- High Court of Justice (Bagatz)
It can hear petitions
directly against the government or state authorities.
Through this role it can:
- Cancel government decisions
- Cancel laws that contradict Basic Laws
- Order the government to act according to the law
This power comes from Israel’s
Basic Laws, which function like a constitution.
- Limits on the Supreme Court
Despite its power, the court
cannot do whatever it wants.
The court cannot:
- Pass laws
- Run the government
- Set national policy
- Order the army to start wars
Those powers belong to the
government and the Knesset.
The court can only intervene if:
- A decision violates a law
- A decision violates Basic Laws (constitutional rights)
- A decision is administratively illegal
- Can the Supreme Court Decide Where the Army Fights?
No.
The
government controls military strategy and war decisions, through:
- The Prime Minister
- The Security Cabinet
- The Minister of Defense
- The IDF command
The Supreme Court
cannot decide when Israel goes to war or where the army fights.
However, it
can review certain military actions if they involve:
- Human rights violations
- Illegal orders
- Administrative legality
Examples of issues the court has ruled on:
- Route of the West Bank security barrier
- Rules about targeted killings
- Detention policies
- Military administrative decisions
But even in these cases the court usually
avoids interfering with battlefield strategy.
- Why the Debate Is So Intense
Israel has a
unique system:
- No full written constitution
- Only one legislative chamber (Knesset)
- Government controls the Knesset majority
Because of this, the
Supreme Court is often the only check on government power.
So the core debate is:
Should unelected judges have the power to block decisions made by elected politicians?
- The Real Constitutional Question
The real disagreement is philosophical:
Critics of the court say
- Judges have too much power
- They interfere in politics
- They override the will of voters
Supporters of the court say
- Without it, the government would have almost unlimited power
- It protects minority rights and democracy
✅
Short answer to your main question
- The Israeli Supreme Court cannot decide where or when the army fights.
- Military decisions belong to the government and security cabinet.
- The court can only intervene if a specific policy violates law or rights.
If you want, I can also explain something
very important that many people misunderstand:
Why Israel’s Supreme Court is considered one of the most powerful courts in the world — and why some people say it has too much power.
can the Can the Supreme Court decide whether or not to shoot soldiers of the enemy or terrorists that are coming up to the border of Israel? What actually happened in judicial rulings of the Supreme Court saying that you could not shoot Gazans that came up to the fence? And can this be construed as one of the reasons that the attacks took place on October 7th?
Your question raises
three separate issues that are often confused in public debate:
- What the Israeli Supreme Court can legally decide about military actions
- What the Court actually ruled about the Gaza border shootings
- Whether those rulings could reasonably be connected to the October 7 attack
I’ll go through each carefully.
- Can the Supreme Court decide whether soldiers can shoot attackers?
No. The
Supreme Court does not set battlefield tactics.
Decisions like:
- when to fire
- where to deploy forces
- whether to attack
are made by:
- the IDF command
- the Defense Minister
- the Security Cabinet
However, the Supreme Court
can review the legality of rules of engagement if someone petitions the court claiming the army is acting illegally.
In those cases the Court asks questions like:
- Do the rules violate Israeli law?
- Do they violate international law?
- Are they consistent with Israel’s Basic Laws?
But the court
does not run the army or command soldiers.
- What actually happened in the Gaza fence case
The major case people refer to happened during the
2018 Gaza border protests (“Great March of Return”).
Human-rights organizations petitioned the Supreme Court arguing:
- The IDF should not use live fire against demonstrators near the fence.
- Shooting should only be allowed in immediate life-threatening situations.
They asked the court to
cancel the army’s rules of engagement.
What the Supreme Court ruled (May 2018)
The Supreme Court
rejected the petition.
The judges ruled that:
- The demonstrations were not just civilian protests, but part of the conflict with Hamas.
- Hamas was using the crowds to try to breach the fence and attack Israeli communities.
- Therefore the IDF could use live fire under certain conditions.
The Court accepted the government’s position that lethal force could be used when there was
immediate danger to soldiers or civilians and as a last resort.
In other words:
The Supreme Court did NOT prohibit shooting people approaching the fence.
In fact, the ruling
allowed the IDF’s existing policy to continue.
- Did the Court restrict the army from defending the border?
No.
The Court’s decision effectively said:
- The army may shoot if necessary to prevent infiltration or danger.
- The army’s rules of engagement were legal.
The Court also said that the
details of how the rules were implemented should be investigated by military authorities, not by judges.
So the claim that the Court ruled that
soldiers could not shoot Gazans approaching the fence is
not accurate.
- Could Supreme Court rulings be responsible for October 7?
There is
no credible evidence from investigations or intelligence reports that Supreme Court rulings caused the October 7 attack.
The attack was primarily the result of:
- Hamas planning and training for years
- Israeli intelligence failures
- military readiness issues
- political and strategic misjudgments
Various Israeli inquiries and analyses have focused on these issues, not on Supreme Court decisions.
Also important:
- The Gaza fence protests were 2018–2019
- October 7 occurred five years later
So the causal link suggested in some political arguments
has not been established by evidence.
- What the Supreme Court has historically done with military cases
The Court has occasionally reviewed military actions, such as:
- targeted killing policies
- detention of suspected militants
- the route of the West Bank security barrier
But even in those cases the Court
usually defers heavily to military expertise.
It almost never intervenes in
operational battlefield decisions.
✅
Summary
- The Supreme Court cannot decide battlefield tactics or when soldiers shoot enemies.
- In the 2018 Gaza fence case, the Court rejected petitions to restrict the IDF and allowed the army’s shooting policy to continue.
- There is no evidence that Supreme Court rulings caused or contributed to the October 7 attack.
If you’d like, I can also explain something very important that many people don’t know:
There are actually several Supreme Court rulings about war and targeted killings that made Israel’s legal framework for fighting terrorism one of the most studied in the world.
please provide a list of Israel Supreme Court decisions relating to war and also specifically IDF rules of engagement
Below is a
list of major Israeli Supreme Court (High Court of Justice – Bagatz) rulings related to war, counter-terrorism, military conduct, and IDF rules of engagement. I will focus on the most important and widely cited cases in Israeli constitutional and military law.
These cases collectively form much of the
legal framework governing how Israel fights wars and terrorism.
Major Israeli Supreme Court Cases on War and Military Conduct
- Targeted Killings Case (2006)
HCJ 769/02 – Public Committee Against Torture in Israel v. Government of Israel
Topic: Legality of targeted assassinations of terrorists.
Key ruling:
- Targeted killing is not automatically illegal, but it is not automatically legal either.
- Each strike must be evaluated case by case.
- It must meet requirements such as:
- the target is directly participating in hostilities
- capture is not feasible
- proportionality (minimizing civilian harm)
The Court recognized that Israel is in
an ongoing armed conflict with terrorist organizations and that the laws of armed conflict apply.
Significance:
This is one of the
most studied counter-terrorism rulings in international law.
Cases Specifically About IDF Rules of Engagement
- Gaza Border Rules of Engagement Case (2018)
HCJ 3003/18 – Yesh Din v. Chief of Staff of the IDF
Topic: IDF use of live fire during the
Great March of Return protests at the Gaza fence.
Human-rights groups argued soldiers should only shoot if there is
immediate danger to life.
Supreme Court decision:
- The Court rejected the petition.
- It ruled the IDF rules of engagement were legal under international law.
- The Court accepted that the events were part of an armed conflict with Hamas.
Significance:
- The Court allowed the IDF to continue its policy of using live fire in certain circumstances.
Cases on Military Occupation and Security Operations
- Security Barrier Case (2004)
HCJ 2056/04 – Beit Sourik Village Council v. Government of Israel
Topic: Construction of the West Bank security barrier.
Key ruling:
- Israel has the right to build the barrier for security.
- But some sections were illegal because they harmed Palestinians disproportionately.
The Court ordered parts of the barrier to be
rerouted.
Significance:
Established the principle of
proportionality in military security measures.
- Targeted Killing Follow-Up Principles (2006 decision framework)
The Court defined rules including:
- Only active participants in hostilities may be targeted.
- If arrest is possible, killing may be illegal.
- Independent investigation must follow civilian deaths.
This ruling became the
legal framework used by the IDF for counter-terrorism operations.
Cases on Interrogation and Treatment of Terror Suspects
- Torture / Interrogation Methods Case (1999)
HCJ 5100/94 – Public Committee Against Torture v. State of Israel
Topic: Interrogation methods used by the Shin Bet.
Key ruling:
- Physical coercion in interrogations is illegal unless justified by the extreme “ticking bomb” defense after the fact.
Significance:
- This case heavily influenced counter-terrorism interrogation law worldwide.
Cases on Detention in Armed Conflict
- Unlawful Combatants Detention Case (2008)
HCJ 6659/06 – A. v. State of Israel
Topic: Detention of members of terrorist organizations without standard criminal trials.
Ruling:
- Israel may detain “unlawful combatants” during armed conflict.
- But the detention must include judicial review and procedural safeguards.
Cases on Deportation and Security Measures
- Assigned Residence Case (2002)
HCJ 7015/02 – Ajuri v. IDF Commander in the West Bank
Topic: Deportation of relatives of terrorists from the West Bank to Gaza.
Ruling:
- Allowed under limited circumstances
- Must meet security necessity and proportionality
Cases on Military Operations Affecting Civilians
- Human Shield Case (2005)
HCJ 3799/02 – Adalah v. GOC Central Command
Topic: IDF practice of asking Palestinian civilians to assist during military operations.
Ruling:
- The practice was illegal.
- The IDF cannot use civilians as human shields.
Additional Supreme Court Cases Related to War
Some additional cases often cited in international law:
| Case |
Topic |
| HCJ 3239/02 Marab v. IDF Commander |
Detention procedures during military operations |
| HCJ 4764/04 Physicians for Human Rights v. IDF |
Medical access during military operations |
| HCJ 9132/07 Al-Bassiouni v. Prime Minister |
Gaza blockade and humanitarian obligations |
Important Context: Why These Cases Matter
Israel’s Supreme Court is unusual because it
allows petitions during ongoing conflicts.
That means:
- NGOs
- Palestinians
- Israeli citizens
can
challenge military policy while a conflict is happening.
Very few countries allow courts to review
war policies in real time.
Key Takeaway
The Israeli Supreme Court
does not run the military, but it has developed legal doctrines governing:
- targeted killings
- detention of combatants
- treatment of civilians
- interrogation
- rules of engagement
- security barriers
These rulings together form
Israel’s judicial law of armed conflict.
✅ If you’d like, I can also provide something very useful for understanding the judicial reform debate:
A list of the Supreme Court rulings that critics of the Court claim demonstrate “judicial overreach” in military matters.
Did the Did the Supreme Court rule that Israel is an occupying power?
Yes —
the Israeli Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that Israel is a “belligerent occupying power” in the West Bank (but
not in Gaza after the 2005 disengagement). However, the meaning of that ruling is often misunderstood, so it’s important to explain what the Court actually said and why.
- What the Supreme Court Actually Ruled
The Israeli Supreme Court has consistently held that
the West Bank is under “belligerent occupation” under international law, specifically under the
Hague Regulations (1907) and parts of the
Fourth Geneva Convention.
This does
not mean the Court ruled that Israel’s presence there is illegal. It means that the legal framework governing the territory is the
law of occupation.
The reasoning is straightforward:
- Israel took control of the territory during the 1967 Six-Day War.
- The territory was not annexed into Israel (except East Jerusalem).
- Therefore the military administration must follow the laws governing occupied territory.
- Key Supreme Court Cases That Affirm This
Beit Sourik Case (2004)
HCJ 2056/04 – Beit Sourik Village Council v. Government of Israel
The Court ruled:
“Israel holds the area in belligerent occupation.”
But it also ruled Israel has the
right and duty to protect its citizens.
This case dealt with the
route of the West Bank security barrier.
Ajuri Case (2002)
HCJ 7015/02 – Ajuri v. IDF Commander
The Court said the IDF’s authority in the West Bank derives from:
- belligerent occupation law
- the powers of a military commander under international law
Elon Moreh Case (1979)
HCJ 390/79 – Elon Moreh v. Government of Israel
The Court ruled:
- The West Bank is held in belligerent occupation
- Military authority must operate under international occupation law
This case restricted
land seizure for settlements when not based on security needs.
- Why the Court Uses the Occupation Framework
The Court adopted this framework because:
- Israel governs the territory through a military administration
- The territory was not sovereign Israeli territory
- International law provides rules for how such territories must be administered
Using occupation law actually
defines and limits the military’s authority.
- The Court’s Important Qualification
The Israeli Supreme Court has
not fully adopted every interpretation of the Geneva Convention.
For example:
- The Court has questioned whether the Fourth Geneva Convention formally applies, because the territory did not belong to a recognized sovereign state in 1967.
- But it applies many of its humanitarian provisions voluntarily.
So the Court often applies the rules
“as customary international law” rather than because the treaty strictly binds Israel.
- Gaza After 2005
After Israel withdrew from Gaza in
2005, the government argued Gaza was no longer occupied.
In a
2008 Supreme Court case (Al-Bassiouni v. Prime Minister) the Court stated:
- Israel no longer holds Gaza under belligerent occupation.
However, the Court said Israel still has
certain humanitarian obligations because of the conflict and border control.
- What the Court Did NOT Rule
The Court
did not rule that:
- Israel’s control of the territories is illegal.
- Israel must withdraw.
- Israel cannot defend itself in those territories.
Those issues are
political and diplomatic questions, not judicial ones.
- Why This Issue Is Politically Controversial
Some critics argue that by applying occupation law the Court:
- accepts the international narrative of “occupation”
- gives legal standing to petitions from Palestinians and NGOs.
Supporters argue that applying the law of occupation:
- protects Israel legally
- shows the military operates under rule-of-law constraints
- strengthens Israel’s position internationally.
Summary
- The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled that the West Bank is under “belligerent occupation” under international law.
- This defines the legal framework governing military authority there.
- The Court ruled Gaza is not occupied after 2005.
- These rulings do not determine Israel’s final political borders or sovereignty claims.
If you’d like, I can also explain a
very important legal debate inside Israel:
Some Israeli legal scholars argue the Supreme Court adopted the “occupation doctrine” voluntarily and that it was not legally required.
That debate is actually central to the
judicial reform controversy today.
Does the Supreme Court’s reasonableness doctrine include any reference to Jewish values or only international law?
The
“reasonableness doctrine” (עילת הסבירות) used by the Israeli Supreme Court does
not primarily derive from international law, and it
does not explicitly reference Jewish religious law (Halacha). Instead, it comes mainly from
administrative law traditions inherited from British common law. However, Israeli law sometimes instructs courts to consider
Jewish values alongside democratic principles, which can indirectly influence reasoning in some cases.
Here is how the doctrine actually works.
- What the Reasonableness Doctrine Is
The
reasonableness doctrine allows courts to review government decisions and invalidate them if they are
extremely unreasonable.
In practice, it means a court may overturn a decision if a government authority:
- ignored important considerations
- considered irrelevant factors
- made a decision that no reasonable authority would make
The idea is that
government discretion has limits.
This principle became prominent in Israeli law through Supreme Court jurisprudence, especially under
Chief Justice Aharon Barak in the 1980s–1990s.
- Its Legal Origin
The doctrine comes mainly from:
- British administrative law
- the Wednesbury unreasonableness principle (from a 1948 British case: Associated Provincial Picture Houses v. Wednesbury Corporation)
Israel adopted and expanded this concept.
Under Barak’s jurisprudence, the Israeli version became broader than the British one.
- Relationship to International Law
The
reasonableness doctrine itself is not based on international law.
However, when the court reviews government actions it may consider:
- Israeli Basic Laws
- administrative law principles
- sometimes international law norms
International law can therefore
influence the context, but it is
not the source of the doctrine.
- Do Jewish Values Play a Role?
Indirectly, yes — but not as a direct legal rule within the doctrine itself.
A key law here is:
Foundations of Law Act (1980)
This law says that if Israeli law lacks a clear answer, courts should decide according to:
“the principles of freedom, justice, equity, and peace of Israel’s heritage.”
That phrase refers broadly to
Jewish legal and ethical tradition.
Additionally,
Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty states that Israel is a
“Jewish and democratic state.”
Because of that, courts sometimes interpret laws using:
- democratic values
- Jewish ethical traditions
But the
reasonableness doctrine itself is not defined in religious terms.
- What Judges Usually Rely On
When applying reasonableness, judges typically look at:
- proper administrative procedure
- proportionality
- relevant vs irrelevant considerations
- fairness and public interest
These are
general legal principles, not religious law.
- Why the Doctrine Became Controversial
Critics argue the doctrine:
- allows judges too much discretion
- lets courts replace government judgment with judicial judgment
Supporters argue it:
- prevents corrupt or arbitrary government actions
- is essential for checks and balances
Because Israel lacks a full written constitution and has a
single legislative chamber, the doctrine became a powerful tool of judicial review.
Summary
- The reasonableness doctrine comes from British administrative law, not international law.
- It does not explicitly incorporate Jewish law.
- Courts sometimes interpret laws in light of Israel’s identity as a Jewish and democratic state, but that is separate from the doctrine itself.
If you want, I can also explain something very important for understanding the judicial reform debate:
Why Israel’s version of the reasonableness doctrine became much broader than the one used in the UK or other democracies.
Is Israel a Jewish democratic state if the final decision-making by the Supreme Court, including the ability to cancel laws by the Knesset, does not consider or is not based on any Jewish values? I’m referring to Jewish values, not just halacha.
This question goes to the
core constitutional debate in Israel: what it means for Israel to be both
“Jewish and democratic”, and how courts should interpret that phrase.
I’ll explain the
legal framework, what the
Supreme Court actually does, and how the debate is framed by different scholars.
- The Legal Definition: “Jewish and Democratic State”
The phrase
“Jewish and democratic state” appears explicitly in Israel’s Basic Laws, especially:
- Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty (1992)
- Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation (1994)
Both say the purpose of the law is:
“to establish in a Basic Law the values of the State of Israel as a
Jewish and democratic state.”
This phrase is a
constitutional principle guiding interpretation of Israeli law.
- How the Supreme Court Interprets “Jewish”
The Supreme Court has ruled that
“Jewish” refers primarily to national and cultural values, not to religious law.
In major rulings (especially under
Chief Justice Aharon Barak) the Court said the Jewish component includes things like:
- Hebrew language and culture
- Jewish holidays as national holidays
- the Law of Return
- historical connection of the Jewish people to the state
Barak wrote that the Jewish character includes:
- justice
- human dignity
- sanctity of life
- social responsibility
These are presented as
ethical values derived from Jewish tradition, not religious commandments.
- The Court’s Philosophy
The Supreme Court generally argues that:
Jewish values and democratic values
are compatible and mutually reinforcing.
The Court often describes Jewish values as including principles like:
- “Love your neighbor as yourself”
- Human dignity
- Justice
- Protection of minorities
In this view,
universal human rights are themselves part of Jewish moral tradition.
- Why Critics Disagree
Critics of the Court argue that in practice the Court has emphasized:
- universal liberal democratic principles
- international law norms
while
minimizing distinct Jewish national values.
Some critics say this leads to:
- decisions that reflect Western liberal jurisprudence
- limited reference to Jewish legal tradition
This critique became especially strong during the
judicial reform debate.
Some legal scholars argue that the Court has interpreted “Jewish” in a
very broad, universal way, rather than in a specifically Jewish legal or cultural framework.
- Can the Court Cancel Laws?
Yes — since the
1990s constitutional revolution, the Supreme Court has claimed authority to invalidate laws that violate Basic Laws.
This authority comes from rulings such as:
- Bank Mizrahi v. Migdal Cooperative Village (1995)
The Court held that
Basic Laws have constitutional status, and that the Court can strike down ordinary legislation that contradicts them.
- Do Judges Need to Base Decisions on Jewish Values?
Legally, the Court is
not required to explicitly cite Jewish sources when ruling.
However:
- The Foundations of Law Act (1980) says that when Israeli law has a gap, courts may refer to “the principles of freedom, justice, equity, and peace of Israel’s heritage.”
That phrase refers to
Jewish legal and ethical tradition.
In practice, courts sometimes cite:
- Jewish legal sources
- biblical or rabbinic concepts
but it is
not the main basis of most rulings.
- The Core Constitutional Debate
Your question reflects one of the
central disagreements in Israeli constitutional theory.
One view
Israel remains Jewish and democratic because:
- Jewish values include universal ethical principles.
- Democracy protects the Jewish state by ensuring justice and minority rights.
Another view
Some critics argue that if Jewish national values
do not play a stronger role in legal interpretation, then the system becomes:
- primarily liberal democratic
- with Jewish identity expressed mainly through symbolic or cultural elements.
This debate is
ongoing and unresolved.
- Important Reality
Israel’s constitutional system is unusual because:
- it has no full written constitution
- Basic Laws were passed gradually
- many principles are defined through court interpretation
Because of this, the
Supreme Court plays a larger role in shaping constitutional meaning than courts in many other countries.
Summary
- Israeli law defines the state as “Jewish and democratic.”
- The Supreme Court interprets Jewish values mainly as ethical and national principles, not religious law.
- Critics argue the Court relies more on liberal democratic principles than specifically Jewish sources.
- This tension is a major issue in Israel’s constitutional and judicial reform debate.
If you want, I can also explain something that is
very important for understanding this debate historically:
The “constitutional revolution” of the 1990s that dramatically expanded the Supreme Court’s power in Israel.
What decisions has the Israeli Supreme Court made regarding life and death decisions? Would the Court support a law of execution should the Israeli Knesset pass the law of execution for terrorists?
Your question involves two separate issues:
- What Israeli Supreme Court rulings have dealt with life-and-death issues (military force, targeted killings, etc.)
- Whether the Court would likely allow a death-penalty law for terrorists if the Knesset passed one
I’ll address both based on actual legal rulings and the current constitutional framework.
- Major Supreme Court Decisions Involving Life-and-Death Issues
The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled on several matters where state actions could lead to death. These usually involve
war, counter-terrorism, and the use of lethal force, not criminal executions.
Targeted Killing Case (2006)
HCJ 769/02 – Public Committee Against Torture v. Government of Israel
This is the most important life-and-death ruling.
The Court ruled:
- Targeted killing of terrorists is not inherently illegal.
- It may be permitted during armed conflict if:
- the person is directly participating in hostilities
- capture is not feasible
- the attack satisfies proportionality
- there is post-operation investigation if civilians are harmed.
The Court essentially created
legal conditions for lethal counter-terrorism operations.
Gaza Border Rules of Engagement Case (2018)
HCJ 3003/18 – Yesh Din v. Chief of Staff
Human-rights groups asked the Court to prohibit the IDF from using
live fire against Gaza border infiltrators.
The Court ruled:
- The events were part of armed conflict with Hamas.
- The IDF may use live fire as a last resort to stop infiltration and danger.
The Court
rejected the petition and allowed the military rules to remain.
Human Shield Case (2005)
HCJ 3799/02 – Adalah v. IDF Central Command
The Court ruled the IDF
cannot use civilians as human shields during operations.
This was a case about
protecting civilian life during military operations.
Interrogation / Torture Case (1999)
HCJ 5100/94 – Public Committee Against Torture v. Israel
The Court ruled:
- Interrogators cannot use physical coercion during interrogations.
- A “ticking bomb” scenario might provide criminal defense afterward, but not prior authorization.
This ruling involved
life-saving scenarios versus detainee rights.
- Does Israel Have the Death Penalty?
Israel technically
still has a death penalty in law, but it is extremely limited.
Capital punishment exists for:
- genocide
- crimes against humanity
- war crimes
- treason during wartime
It has been used
only once in Israel’s history:
Adolf Eichmann (1962)
He was executed after conviction for Nazi war crimes.
- Proposed Death Penalty for Terrorists
Several Israeli governments have proposed a law allowing
capital punishment for terrorists convicted of murder.
Some versions proposed:
- death penalty for terrorists who kill Israeli civilians
- reduced requirement for unanimous military court approval
These proposals have
not become law.
- Would the Supreme Court Strike Down Such a Law?
No one can know with certainty until a real case appears, but legal scholars generally say:
The Court probably would NOT automatically invalidate such a law if:
- it is passed properly by the Knesset
- it includes due process protections
- it applies only to extreme cases like mass-murder terrorism
This is because:
- Israeli Basic Laws do not explicitly ban capital punishment.
However, the Court would likely review it under
Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty.
That law protects:
But it also allows rights to be limited if the law:
- serves a proper purpose
- is proportional
- is enacted by statute.
- Possible Legal Challenges
Opponents would likely argue that execution violates:
- human dignity
- Israel’s constitutional values
- international norms
Supporters would argue:
- the law protects the right to life of civilians
- terrorism is part of armed conflict
- deterrence justifies the punishment.
- What the Court Has Historically Done
Historically the Israeli Supreme Court has
rarely invalidated national-security legislation outright.
Instead it tends to:
- allow the law
- impose procedural safeguards
- interpret it narrowly.
This pattern appears in many security cases.
- The Real Constitutional Question
The key legal issue would be:
Does capital punishment violate “human dignity” under Israel’s Basic Laws?
Israeli courts have
never definitively ruled on this question.
Summary
- The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled on life-and-death issues mainly in war and counter-terrorism contexts.
- The Court has allowed lethal force under strict legal conditions.
- Israel still legally has the death penalty for exceptional crimes, but it has been used only once.
- If the Knesset passed a death-penalty law for terrorists, the Supreme Court might review it but would not necessarily strike it down automatically.
If you’d like, I can also show you something very interesting:
Why many Israeli legal scholars say the Supreme Court is one of the only courts in the world that regularly reviews military combat policy during active conflicts.
How can Israel’s basic law be changed. Can the Knesset vote for a new basic law. How can a referendum take place? Who can authorize it?
Israel’s
Basic Laws function as the country’s constitutional framework. Because Israel does not have a single written constitution, these laws can be
created, amended, or replaced by the Knesset, but the procedures vary depending on the specific Basic Law. I’ll explain clearly how each mechanism works.
- Can the Knesset Pass a New Basic Law?
Yes.
The
Knesset can pass a new Basic Law just like it passes ordinary legislation, but the law must explicitly be labeled
“Basic Law”.
Typical process
- A bill is proposed (by a government minister or a Knesset member).
- It goes through three readings in the Knesset.
- If a majority of members voting approve it in the final reading, it becomes law.
Israel’s Basic Laws were originally meant to be
chapters of a future constitution, so they have been passed gradually since
1950.
- Can Basic Laws Be Amended or Repealed?
Yes, but it depends on the
entrenchment clause in the specific Basic Law.
Two types exist:
- Ordinary Basic Laws (simple majority)
Most Basic Laws can be amended by:
- simple majority vote of the Knesset
That means
more votes in favor than against among those present.
Example:
Many amendments to
Basic Law: The Government have passed this way.
- Entrenched Basic Laws (special majority required)
Some Basic Laws require a
special majority.
For example:
- Basic Law: The Knesset (certain sections)
- Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel
- Basic Law: Referendum
Some provisions require:
- 61 MKs (absolute majority)
or sometimes 80 MKs depending on the clause.
- Can the Knesset Override the Supreme Court?
Currently there is
no formal override clause in Israeli Basic Laws.
However, the Knesset can theoretically:
- amend a Basic Law
- pass a new Basic Law
that changes the legal framework.
This ability is central to the
judicial reform debate.
- How Can a Referendum Take Place in Israel?
Israel does have a law that requires a referendum in certain cases.
This comes from:
Basic Law: Referendum (2014)
It requires a
national referendum if Israel intends to give up territory under Israeli law.
This applies to areas like:
- East Jerusalem
- the Golan Heights
because Israeli law was applied there.
- Who Can Authorize a Referendum?
A referendum is triggered if:
- The government signs an agreement to withdraw from territory under Israeli law.
- The Knesset approves the agreement.
Then one of two things must happen:
Option A
The agreement is approved by
80 Knesset members
→ No referendum required.
Option B
If the agreement receives
61–79 votes
→ It must go to a
national referendum.
The public then votes to approve or reject it.
- Who Actually Organizes the Referendum?
If a referendum is required:
- the government initiates it
- the Central Elections Committee runs it
The process is similar to a national election.
- Can Citizens Initiate a Referendum?
No.
Israel
does not have citizen-initiated referendums.
Only:
- the government
- the Knesset
can trigger one under the Basic Law.
- Can Israel Create a Full Constitution?
Yes — legally the Knesset could pass a
comprehensive constitution at any time.
The idea originates from the
Harari Resolution (1950), which said the constitution would be written gradually through Basic Laws.
But politically, consensus has never been reached.
Summary
- The Knesset can create new Basic Laws through legislation.
- Most Basic Laws can be changed with a simple majority, though some require special majorities.
- Referendums occur only in specific territorial withdrawal situations under Basic Law: Referendum (2014).
- Citizens cannot initiate referendums; they must be triggered by the government and Knesset.
If you’d like, I can also explain something very important that many people misunderstand:
How the Supreme Court gained the power to cancel Knesset laws even though the Basic Laws never explicitly granted that authority.
yes please explain
The Israeli Supreme Court’s power to
invalidate (strike down) laws passed by the Knesset emerged gradually and is closely tied to what is often called the
“constitutional revolution” of the 1990s.” Understanding this requires looking at three stages: the
original constitutional plan, the
passage of Basic Laws in 1992, and the
1995 Supreme Court ruling that established judicial review.
- The Original Plan: Basic Laws as a Future Constitution
When Israel was founded in 1948, its Declaration of Independence promised a constitution. However, political disagreements prevented adopting one immediately.
In
1950, the Knesset passed the
Harari Resolution, which said:
- A constitution would be written gradually.
- It would consist of separate Basic Laws, each covering a constitutional topic.
- Eventually, they would be combined into a full constitution.
For decades, Basic Laws mainly dealt with
government structure, such as:
- Basic Law: The Knesset
- Basic Law: The Government
- Basic Law: The Judiciary
At this stage, the Supreme Court
did not claim the power to strike down laws.
- The 1992 Basic Laws on Rights
In
1992, the Knesset passed two important Basic Laws:
- Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty
- Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation
These laws were different from earlier Basic Laws because they
protected individual rights.
Both laws included a key clause known as the
“limitation clause.”
It says rights may only be violated by a law that:
- Fits the values of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state
- Serves a proper purpose
- Violates the right no more than necessary (proportionality)
These laws were passed with
relatively small Knesset majorities, and they
did not explicitly state that the Supreme Court could strike down laws.
- The 1995 Decision: Bank Mizrahi Case
The turning point came in
1995.
Case
HCJ 6821/93 – United Mizrahi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village
The Court ruled that:
- Basic Laws have constitutional status
- The Knesset acts in two roles:
- ordinary legislature
- constituent authority (writing the constitution)
Because Basic Laws are constitutional, the Court said:
If a regular law contradicts a Basic Law, the Court may invalidate it.
This ruling effectively created
judicial review of legislation in Israel.
The decision was written by
Chief Justice Aharon Barak, who described it as a
constitutional revolution.
- Why Critics Say the Court “Created” This Power
Critics argue that:
- The Basic Laws never explicitly gave the Court this authority.
- The Knesset did not formally declare a constitution.
- The Court interpreted the Basic Laws as constitutional on its own initiative.
Therefore critics say the Court
expanded its own power through interpretation.
- Why Supporters Defend the Ruling
Supporters argue that:
- The Knesset intentionally passed constitutional Basic Laws.
- A constitution requires judicial enforcement.
- Without judicial review, rights in the Basic Laws would be meaningless.
They say the Court simply
implemented the constitutional framework created by the Knesset.
- How Often the Court Uses This Power
Even after 1995, the Court has
rarely struck down laws compared to courts in some countries.
However, its ability to do so has been used in important cases involving:
- immigration policy
- detention of asylum seekers
- certain security legislation
- judicial reform laws
- Why This Became Central to the Judicial Reform Debate
The reform debate focuses on questions like:
- Should unelected judges have the power to invalidate laws?
- Should the Knesset have an override clause?
- Should Basic Laws be harder to change?
Because Israel has:
- one legislative chamber
- strong executive control over the Knesset majority
the Supreme Court has often served as the
main institutional check on government power.
Summary
- Israel’s Basic Laws were intended to form a gradual constitution.
- In 1995, the Supreme Court ruled that Basic Laws have constitutional status.
- The Court concluded that it therefore has authority to strike down laws that contradict them.
- This interpretation, known as the constitutional revolution, remains one of the most debated issues in Israeli law.
If you’d like, I can also explain something that helps clarify the whole issue:
Why some scholars argue Israel’s Supreme Court became one of the most powerful constitutional courts in the world.
yes go ahead
Many legal scholars say the
Israeli Supreme Court is one of the most powerful constitutional courts in the world. This claim does not mean it is more influential politically than every court, but rather that
its formal legal powers and the structure of Israel’s system give it unusually broad authority compared with courts in most democracies.
Several structural features of Israel’s system explain this.
- No Full Written Constitution
Most democracies have a
single written constitution that clearly defines:
- the powers of courts
- the limits of legislation
- amendment procedures
Israel instead has
Basic Laws, which were passed gradually by the Knesset.
Because these laws are incomplete and sometimes vague, the Supreme Court has had a
large role in interpreting their meaning. This gives the Court significant influence over constitutional interpretation.
- The Court Recognized Its Own Power of Judicial Review
In
1995 (Bank Mizrahi case) the Court ruled that Basic Laws have constitutional status and that it may
invalidate ordinary laws that contradict them.
In many countries this power is explicitly written in the constitution.
In Israel, the Court derived it through
interpretation.
This decision is often called the
“constitutional revolution.”
- Israel Has Only One Legislative Chamber
Most democracies have
two legislative chambers (for example, the U.S. Senate and House, or Britain’s House of Commons and House of Lords).
Israel has only
one chamber: the Knesset.
Because there is no second chamber to review legislation, the Supreme Court often becomes the
main institutional check on the legislative majority.
- The Executive Controls the Parliamentary Majority
In Israel’s parliamentary system:
- the government is formed from the Knesset majority
- the governing coalition usually controls most votes in parliament.
This means the executive branch and legislature often act together.
As a result, the
judiciary becomes the primary independent branch able to limit government actions.
- Extremely Broad Standing Rules
In many countries, a person must show
direct personal harm to challenge a law in court.
Israel’s Supreme Court has historically allowed
very broad standing, meaning:
- NGOs
- public interest groups
- sometimes even individuals without direct personal harm
can petition the Court on matters of public policy.
This greatly increases the number of cases the Court can hear.
- The Court Can Hear Cases Directly Against the Government
The Supreme Court also functions as the
High Court of Justice (Bagatz).
This allows people to
petition the Court directly against government actions without going through lower courts.
Examples include challenges to:
- military policy
- government appointments
- administrative decisions
- legislation.
This role is unusual compared with many other countries.
- Judicial Doctrines Like “Reasonableness”
Israeli courts developed doctrines that allow judges to review government decisions not only for legality but also for
extreme unreasonableness.
Critics say this gives judges broad discretion to evaluate policy decisions.
Supporters say it prevents arbitrary or corrupt government actions.
- The Court Reviews Military and Security Decisions
Another unusual feature is that Israel’s Supreme Court sometimes reviews
military policies during ongoing conflicts, including:
- targeted killings
- detention policies
- security barriers
- rules of engagement.
Few courts in other countries examine military conduct to this degree during active security situations.
- Why Some Scholars Call It “One of the Most Powerful Courts”
When these features combine, the Court has:
- constitutional review powers
- broad access to petitions
- direct oversight of government action
- influence over incomplete constitutional texts.
This creates a system where the Court plays a
central role in shaping the country’s constitutional structure.
- Why Others Disagree
Some scholars argue the Court’s power is
not unusual compared with courts like:
- the U.S. Supreme Court
- Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court
- Canada’s Supreme Court
They argue Israel’s Court simply fills a role normally played by a
written constitution and second legislative chamber.
Summary
Israel’s Supreme Court is often considered unusually powerful because:
- Israel lacks a full constitution
- the Court established judicial review through interpretation
- Israel has a single legislative chamber
- broad standing rules allow many petitions
- the Court directly reviews government and military decisions.
These features together give the Court a
central constitutional role in Israel’s political system.
If you want, I can also explain something that often surprises people studying Israeli law:
Why some Israeli legal scholars argue the Supreme Court has actually become stronger than the Knesset in certain constitutional areas.
yes
Some Israeli legal scholars argue that
in certain constitutional areas the Supreme Court has become stronger than the Knesset. This does not mean the Court governs the country, but that
its ability to interpret Basic Laws and invalidate legislation can sometimes outweigh the Knesset’s legislative authority. This argument is part of the broader debate about the balance of power in Israel’s system.
Here are the main reasons scholars give for this claim.
- The Court Interprets the Meaning of Basic Laws
Basic Laws serve as Israel’s constitutional framework, but many of them are
short and broadly written.
Because of this, the Supreme Court often determines:
- what rights the Basic Laws protect
- how broadly those rights apply
- when the government may limit them
In practice, this means the Court’s interpretation can
define the scope of constitutional rights, which in turn limits what legislation the Knesset can pass.
- Judicial Review of Knesset Laws
Since the
1995 Bank Mizrahi decision, the Court has claimed the authority to
invalidate laws that contradict Basic Laws.
If the Court determines that a Knesset law violates a Basic Law and fails the “limitation clause,” it may declare that law
void.
This power places the Court in a position to
override decisions made by the elected legislature.
- No Formal Override Mechanism
Unlike some other democracies, Israel historically did
not include a constitutional override clause.
For example:
- In Canada, parliament can pass laws overriding certain constitutional rights for a limited period.
- In Israel, once the Court strikes down a law, the Knesset usually must change the law or amend the Basic Law.
Because Basic Laws themselves can sometimes be interpreted by the Court, critics argue that the judiciary effectively
controls the constitutional boundaries of legislation.
- Broad Judicial Doctrines
The Supreme Court developed doctrines that allow extensive review of government decisions.
These include:
- reasonableness
- proportionality
- proper purpose
Through these doctrines, the Court may review not only whether a decision is legal but whether it is
reasonable or proportionate.
Supporters say these principles protect good governance.
Critics say they allow judges to
substitute their judgment for elected officials.
- The Court as the Main Check on Government Power
Israel’s political structure means:
- the government is formed from the Knesset majority
- coalition discipline usually ensures the government controls parliamentary votes.
This creates a system where
executive and legislative powers are closely linked.
Because of this, the judiciary often becomes the
primary independent check on the government.
- Direct Petitions to the Supreme Court
Israel allows citizens, NGOs, and others to
petition the Supreme Court directly against government actions.
This makes the Court a central arena for resolving political and constitutional disputes.
In many countries, such issues might remain in the
political sphere rather than the courts.
- Counterarguments from Other Scholars
Not all scholars agree that the Court is stronger than the Knesset.
Some argue that:
- the Knesset can amend Basic Laws
- the Knesset can change the legal framework through legislation
- ultimately, the legislature still holds constitutional authority
In this view, the Court’s power depends on
the Basic Laws passed by the Knesset itself.
- Why This Debate Became Central to Judicial Reform
The judicial reform proposals in recent years focus largely on this balance of power.
Supporters of reform argue that:
- elected representatives should have greater authority over constitutional questions.
Opponents argue that weakening the Court would remove
one of the main protections against excessive government power.
Summary
Some scholars argue the Israeli Supreme Court is unusually powerful because:
- it interprets Basic Laws that function as a constitution
- it can invalidate Knesset legislation
- Israel lacks a second legislative chamber
- citizens can petition the Court directly on public matters.
Others argue that the Knesset still holds ultimate authority because it can
create or amend Basic Laws.
The debate over this balance of power remains one of the
central constitutional issues in Israel today.
Yes — and this history is important because it explains
why Israel originally did not adopt a full constitution and why the Supreme Court was initially weaker.
- Ben-Gurion opposed a strong constitutional court
David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s first prime minister,
deliberately avoided creating a powerful constitutional system.
His reasons included:
- Flexibility for a new state
Israel in 1948 faced:
- war
- mass immigration
- unclear borders
- uncertain political structure
Ben-Gurion believed a rigid constitution could
restrict the government’s ability to act quickly.
- Parliamentary supremacy
Ben-Gurion believed the
elected parliament (the Knesset) should be the ultimate authority.
He worried that giving courts power to strike down laws would allow
unelected judges to override democratic decisions.
- Deep social divisions
Israeli society included major ideological differences:
- religious vs. secular
- socialist vs. capitalist
- Jewish vs. Arab citizens
- disagreements over borders and identity
Ben-Gurion feared a constitution would force
impossible compromises and paralyze the new state.
- The Harari compromise (1950)
Instead of writing a full constitution, the Knesset adopted what became known as the
Harari Resolution.
It said:
- Israel would adopt Basic Laws gradually
- these laws might eventually form a constitution in the future.
This decision created the system Israel still uses today.
Examples of Basic Laws include:
- Basic Law: The Knesset
- Basic Law: The Government
- Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty
- Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation
But originally these laws were
not treated as superior to ordinary legislation.
- Early Israeli Supreme Court
Before the 1990s, the Supreme Court was influential but
did not strike down Knesset laws.
Its main role was:
- administrative review of government decisions
- protecting procedural fairness.
The Court rarely challenged the Knesset directly.
- The turning point: the 1990s “constitutional revolution”
When the Knesset passed the Basic Laws on
Human Dignity and Liberty and
Freedom of Occupation (1992–1994), Aharon Barak argued that:
- these laws functioned as constitutional rights protections
- therefore courts could invalidate legislation that violates them.
In a landmark 1995 case (
United Mizrahi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village), the Supreme Court ruled that:
- Basic Laws have constitutional status
- the Court has authority for judicial review of legislation.
This dramatically expanded judicial power.
Barak called this transformation Israel’s
“constitutional revolution.”
- Why the debate continues today
Some Israelis believe Barak
correctly completed the constitutional framework that the Harari Resolution envisioned.
Others argue:
- the Court gave itself powers the Knesset never explicitly granted
- constitutional authority should come from a formal constitution approved by the public.
This disagreement is at the heart of Israel’s
modern judicial reform debates.
✅
In short
- Israel’s founders intentionally created a parliament-centered system with a relatively weak court.
- The absence of a full constitution left legal ambiguity.
- In the 1990s, Aharon Barak and the Supreme Court interpreted new Basic Laws as creating constitutional judicial review, dramatically increasing the Court’s power.
If you want, I can also explain something many people find surprising:
how Israel’s judicial system compares with the U.S., UK, and European courts in terms of power and oversight.
Comparative constitutional scholars often try to
measure how powerful different supreme or constitutional courts are in practice. When they do this, Israel’s Supreme Court frequently ranks among the
most influential courts in democratic systems, though the reasons are somewhat unusual.
Here are the main dimensions scholars look at.
- Ability to strike down laws
| Country |
Can the court invalidate legislation? |
Notes |
| Israel |
Yes (since 1995) |
Based on Basic Laws |
| United States |
Yes |
Long-standing constitutional review |
| Germany |
Yes |
Strong constitutional court |
| Canada |
Yes |
But legislature can override |
| United Kingdom |
No |
Parliament remains sovereign |
Important difference:
Canada’s Charter includes the
“notwithstanding clause,” allowing legislatures to override certain court rulings temporarily. Israel has
no general override mechanism, so court rulings are harder to reverse.
- Access to the court (standing rules)
| Country |
Who can bring a case? |
| Israel |
Very broad standing |
| United States |
Must show direct personal injury |
| Germany |
Structured constitutional complaints |
| Canada |
Moderate standing rules |
Israel historically allowed
public-interest petitions, meaning NGOs and individuals could challenge government policies even without direct personal harm. This dramatically increases judicial influence.
- Direct review of government actions
Israel’s Supreme Court functions as the
High Court of Justice, allowing direct petitions against:
- government ministries
- military authorities
- administrative decisions.
Few democracies allow citizens to
go directly to the highest court to challenge executive actions.
In many countries:
- cases must go through multiple lower courts first.
- Judicial review of military and security policy
Israel’s Court has reviewed issues such as:
- military operations in the West Bank
- targeted killings
- interrogation practices
- security barriers
- detention policies.
Most courts in other democracies
avoid reviewing active military policy, especially during ongoing conflicts.
This gives the Israeli Court an unusually large role in
national security law.
- Constitutional flexibility
Countries with detailed constitutions (like Germany or the U.S.) constrain courts with:
- explicit constitutional text
- long-established doctrine.
Israel’s
Basic Laws are shorter and less detailed, giving judges greater interpretive discretion.
That flexibility can expand judicial influence.
- Weak political counterweights
In many systems courts are balanced by:
- federal states
- bicameral legislatures
- presidential vetoes
- constitutional amendment procedures.
Israel lacks many of these institutional counterweights:
- one legislative chamber
- coalition governments controlling parliament
- no presidential veto
- no federal states.
As a result, the Supreme Court often becomes the
primary institutional check on government power.
- Academic rankings of judicial power
Comparative political science studies often classify courts roughly like this:
Very strong constitutional courts
- Germany
- Israel
- South Africa
Strong courts
Moderate courts
These rankings reflect not just legal authority but
how often courts intervene in political issues.
✅
Bottom line
Israel’s Supreme Court is considered unusually powerful because:
- it can invalidate legislation
- access to the court is very broad
- it directly reviews executive and military decisions
- the political system has relatively few institutional checks on government power
These factors together give the Court
a central role in Israel’s constitutional system.
If you’d like, I can also explain a
little-known historical moment that shaped all of this: the single Knesset debate in 1992–1995 that quietly enabled the Supreme Court’s constitutional revolution.
yes
The moment that enabled Israel’s
“constitutional revolution” in the 1990s was surprisingly quiet and received
very little public attention at the time.
- The 1992 Basic Laws
In 1992 the Knesset passed two key laws:
- Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty
- Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation
These laws created protections for certain individual rights, such as:
- life and personal liberty
- privacy
- property
- freedom of occupation.
However, when they were passed,
most lawmakers did not believe they were creating a full constitutional system.
- Very small parliamentary vote
The laws passed late at night with
very few members of Knesset present.
For example:
- the Human Dignity law passed with 32 votes in favor and 21 against out of a 120-member parliament.
Because Basic Laws were normally treated as
ordinary legislation, the vote did not attract major national attention.
- The “limitation clause”
The new laws included a clause stating that rights could only be violated if a law:
- serves a proper purpose
- and does so to an extent no greater than required.
This clause resembles constitutional language used in other countries.
At the time, however, many lawmakers saw it simply as
a general guideline, not necessarily a basis for striking down legislation.
- The turning point: 1995 Mizrahi Bank case
Three years later, the Israeli Supreme Court issued a landmark decision:
United Mizrahi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village (1995).
The Court ruled that:
- Basic Laws have constitutional status
- Courts can invalidate legislation that contradicts them
- Israel effectively now has a constitutional framework
Aharon Barak described this transformation as Israel’s
“constitutional revolution.”
- Why this surprised many politicians
Some lawmakers later said they
did not realize the laws would lead to judicial review of legislation.
Others argued that:
- the constitutional implications were actually clear
- the Knesset deliberately chose to create rights protections.
This disagreement became a
major source of political controversy later.
- Why the debate still matters
The controversy over the 1990s constitutional shift continues to influence Israeli politics today.
Supporters say the Court:
- properly interpreted the Basic Laws
- completed the constitutional structure envisioned by the 1950 Harari Resolution.
Critics say the Court:
- expanded its authority beyond what the Knesset intended
- created constitutional judicial review without explicit democratic authorization.
✅
In short
- Two Basic Laws passed quietly in 1992 created rights protections.
- In 1995, the Supreme Court interpreted those laws as giving them constitutional status.
- This decision enabled courts to strike down legislation, dramatically increasing judicial power.
If you’d like, I can also explain something that surprises many people:
why Israel’s Supreme Court rarely strikes down laws even though it has the power to do so.
If you want, I can also explain
why Barak believed courts must be powerful in Israel specifically, which ties directly to Israel’s political structure and lack of constitutional checks.
yes
Aharon Barak believed that
Israel required an unusually strong Supreme Court because of the country’s political structure and institutional weaknesses compared to other democracies. His argument was rooted in how Israel’s system of government works.
- Israel has very few checks and balances
In many democracies power is divided among multiple institutions:
| Country |
Separate checks |
| United States |
President, Congress, Supreme Court, federalism |
| UK |
House of Commons, House of Lords, monarchy, courts |
| Germany |
Federal states, constitutional court, parliament |
Israel’s system is different:
- It has one legislative chamber (the Knesset).
- The government comes directly from the parliamentary majority.
- There is no presidential veto.
- There are no federal states with independent authority.
This means the executive branch often
controls the legislature.
Barak argued that this concentration of power leaves
the judiciary as the main independent check.
- Coalition governments dominate parliament
Israeli governments are formed by
coalitions of parties.
Once a coalition is formed:
- the coalition usually controls the Knesset majority
- party discipline means members typically vote with the government.
Barak believed this weakens parliamentary oversight of the executive.
So the
court becomes the institution that can restrain government power.
- No entrenched constitution
Because Israel lacks a single written constitution, Barak believed courts must
protect fundamental rights through interpretation of the Basic Laws.
In the 1990s, the Knesset passed two important Basic Laws:
- Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty
- Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation
Barak interpreted these laws as giving the Court
constitutional authority to review and invalidate legislation that violates fundamental rights.
This is what he called Israel’s
“constitutional revolution.”
- Protection of minority rights
Barak argued that courts must protect minorities from majority rule.
He believed democracy requires two elements:
- majority rule
- protection of fundamental rights
If parliament represents the majority, courts must protect the second.
- His broader judicial philosophy
Barak’s philosophy is often summarized with two famous ideas:
“Everything is justiciable”
Almost all government actions should be reviewable by courts.
“The world is filled with law”
Even decisions involving security or politics must operate within legal frameworks.
He rejected the idea that
national security decisions should be beyond judicial review.
- Why this approach became controversial
Barak’s vision significantly expanded judicial authority.
Critics argue it produced:
- judicial activism
- courts interfering in policy decisions
- unelected judges shaping national policy.
Supporters argue it created:
- strong protection of rights
- rule of law during conflict
- limits on government power.
✅
Bottom line
Barak believed Israel needed a strong Supreme Court because:
- power in Israel is concentrated in the executive-legislative coalition
- there is no full constitution
- there are few institutional checks on government authority
So in his view, the
court had to serve as the primary guardian of democracy and rights.