OPINION
BRET
STEPHENS
In Israel, Democracy Still Holds
March 28,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/28/opinion/israel-protest-bibi-netanyahu-democracy.html
Bret
Stephens
By Bret
Stephens
Opinion
Columnist
Even
Israel’s vehement critics might pause and marvel at what ordinary Israelis
achieved this week.
After weeks
of mounting demonstrations against the government’s judicial-reform bills,
hundreds of thousands took to the streets on Sunday night — proportionally, as
if millions of Americans were on the march — when Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu announced that he would fire his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, for
backing away from the legislation.
The
demonstrators were joined by labor unions, which went on a nationwide strike
that shut down the country’s main airport; by diplomats, who shut down Israeli
consulates and embassies; and by at least some reservists, who threatened to
refuse call-up orders. This was as close to a revolution as the modern state of
Israel has ever seen.
On Monday,
Netanyahu blinked, saying he would postpone the legislation to “take a timeout
for dialogue.” In a better world — or a younger Israel — he would have
resigned. As a matter of politics, he turned what should have been an electoral
mandate for stability, security and economic growth into a fiasco for his own
partisans. As a matter of statesmanship, he brought Israel to the brink of
disaster for the apparent sake of his personal legal expediency and the
ideological fixations of some of his criminal, extremist, lowlife coalition
partners.
Still, he
blinked.
That
deserves a measure of respect. Yes, it isn’t clear whether he means to have a
genuine dialogue with the opposition or merely maneuver for tactical political
advantage, and Israelis should be wary of every word he utters and every step
he takes.
But it’s
more than can be said for President Emmanuel Macron of France, who defied huge
public protests and his own parliament to enact his controversial pension
reforms. Or for President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico, who rammed
through legislation to gut the country’s electoral institutions, also over huge
protests. Or for a certain former American president, who incited a mob to
overturn the results of a democratic election.
If Israel’s
democracy is to be judged, let it at least be judged against other democracies.
By that standard, it may be in better health than is sometimes believed.
This is
true in at least three respects.
First,
Israel’s demonstrators were not against the status quo or “the system.” On the
contrary, they came out to defend it. At every protest, marchers waved Israeli
flags. I have seen no reports of serious property damage or physical injury,
much less of death. The government and its allies have tried to dismiss the
demonstrators as “leftists.” It’s a preposterous claim when critics of the
judicial reforms include the right-wing former prime minister Naftali Bennett
and a dozen former National Security Council chiefs, such as the former Mossad
chief Yossi Cohen and others who served directly under Netanyahu.
In other
words, this was a revolt of the political center against the fringe — showing
that the former is far more vital and energized than it is elsewhere in the
democratic world.
Second,
principled opponents of the government will often concede that there is a
reasonable case to be made in favor of some type of judicial reform. The
Israeli Supreme Court is unusually powerful, and it is legitimate in any
democracy to question and sometimes move the boundary lines among executive,
legislative and judicial powers. Benny Gantz, a former defense minister and one
of the leaders of the political opposition, has noted that “a majority of
Israeli citizens, at least 80 percent, agree on 80 percent of the issues” in
terms of the reforms.
So there’s
ample room for compromise. With broad consultation and a clearer process, court
restructuring could win broad support. But Netanyahu’s efforts will never
escape the taint of partisanship and self-dealing if he continues to grab for
the ability to overturn court decisions with the slimmest parliamentary
majority while potentially appointing judges in his own corruption trial.
Third, Israelis
appreciate that their physical security rests less on their military power than
on social trust; that even bitter political rivals must recognize each other as
comrades in arms. Netanyahu acknowledged as much when he warned last week that
the refusal of reservists to serve put the state itself in “terrible danger.” A
Jewish state that loses the trust of half of its citizens — particularly the
wealthier, more secular and more globally mobile half — will do itself in even
before its enemies do.
Most
Israelis, who grow up with the understanding that their country’s margin of
safety is unusually narrow, know this; it’s only opportunists and fanatics who
forget. This week, the demonstrators reminded them that raw majoritarianism
puts everyone at risk.
On Sunday,
the Israeli writer Amotz Asa-El of the Shalom Hartman Institute pointed out to
me that ancient Israel endured 12 civil wars, beginning with the war between
the tribe of Benjamin and the rest of Israel (Judges 19-21) and ending with the
fighting among the Jewish militias in Jerusalem during the Great Revolt against
the Romans. “That’s an average of roughly one war every four generations,” he
said.
In May,
Israel will turn 75 — three generations, at least. It’s too soon to celebrate a
victory, but the Israelis who have taken to the streets may have spared their
country from repeating that history.
Bret
Stephens has been an Opinion columnist with The Times since April 2017. He won
a Pulitzer Prize for commentary at The Wall Street Journal in 2013 and was
previously editor in chief of The Jerusalem Post. Facebook



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