Supreme Court showdown over Israel’s judicial reform

After months of protests against the hardline Israeli government’s highly controversial judicial overhaul, an historic showdown is taking place.
All 15 Supreme Court judges are convening for the first time to hear petitions against a legal amendment that limits their own powers.
Thousands of Israelis gathered for a rally outside the court in Jerusalem on Monday night in support of the judges.
Critics argue the move will weaken judicial independence and democracy.
“We want to make sure [the judges are] not intimidated by all the threats that this government makes,” said Yaron, a father-of-two from the coastal city of Netanya. “This is about democracy.”
For Orly, who came from Modiin with her friend, it was more emotional. She felt the fundamental character of Israel was at stake.
“Our mother and father were in the Holocaust. We fought for this country,” she said. “We cannot let the government do whatever it wants. We don’t have anywhere else to go.”
In July, the nationalist-religious governing coalition led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed through an important change as part of its radical judicial overhaul.
It cancelled the ability of all courts to block government actions and appointments using the legal standard that they were “unreasonable”.
In a grim reminder of the social divisions that have opened up, a young demonstrator in the crowd told the BBC: “I see that there will be blood in the street. If the left is aggressive, the right will be more aggressive.”
Mr Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption charges which he denies, has been vague when asked whether he would stick to a ruling that would quash the new law. —BBC