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Tags: israel | ag | benjamin netanyahu | judicial reform

Israel's AG Tells Netanyahu Not to Intervene in Judicial Reform

benjamin netanyahu looks on
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (AP)

By    |   Thursday, 02 February 2023 09:57 AM EST

The Israeli attorney general told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday to refrain from involvement in proposed changes to Israel's judicial system because he is still categorized as having a conflict of interest.

Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara said Netanyahu is still bound by the conflict-of-interest opinion he received during his previous term as prime minister, which prohibits him from involving himself in both the legislation and implementation of judicial reforms, including negotiations proposed by President Isaac Herzog.

The attorney general said these restrictions would not extend to a prohibition on voting on the legislation as a Knesset member.

In her instructions, Baharav-Miara claims "the existence of a reasonable concern of a conflict of interest between [Netanyahu's] personal affairs relating to the trial in which he is a defendant, and material elements of the [judicial reform] initiatives."

She stated that this directive is "in accordance with the standards detailed in the opinion and approved in the judgment in the 2021 conflict of interest petition" and that it "also applies to the provision of direct or indirect guidance through other parties in all matters relating to the advancement of initiatives."

Critics of the proposed judicial reforms fear they would give more influence over the selection of justices to elected politicians, thus allowing Netanyahu a way to influence the judges who could hear his trial related to breach of trust and other allegations.

Proponents of the legislation suggest that the present system, which allows sitting judges to select their own successors, gives the Supreme Court justices too much power and influence beyond their terms of service.

In the opposing camp, the attorney general stated that "such a change [of the judicial system] concerns the personal interests of the prime minister, and is therefore tainted by a clear conflict of interest."

Netanyahu stated in an interview with CNN this week that it is "false" to suggest that he would receive personal benefit from the reforms.

"None of the reforms that we're talking about … have anything to do with my trial. And, by the way, the trial is unraveling," Netanyahu said to CNN's Jake Tapper.

"You need the balance between three branches of government. In Israel, that balance has been thrown askew and you have one branch … the judiciary basically arrogating to itself the powers of the legislative and the government," he said.

The attorney general's instruction does not place restrictions on Justice Minister Yariv Levin or Justice Committee Chair Simcha Rothman. The justice minister introduced the reforms at the beginning of January, while Rothman is processing the reforms through the Justice Committee, so the Knesset can vote on them thereafter.

The justice-reform sponsor responded to Baharav-Miara's letter by suggesting she is ignoring other problems in her purview by busying herself "writing another opinion aimed at preventing the prime minister from expressing his views."

"It turns out that a conflict of interest is a strange thing. An elected official is not allowed to talk about reforming the legal counsel, but the legal adviser and her staff are allowed to act to thwart the reform that directly concerns their powers," Levin said.

This article originally appeared on ALL ISRAEL NEWS and is reposted with permission.

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GlobalTalk
The Israeli attorney general told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday to refrain from involvement in proposed changes to Israel's judicial system because he is still categorized as having a conflict of interest.
israel, ag, benjamin netanyahu, judicial reform
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2023-57-02
Thursday, 02 February 2023 09:57 AM
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