As Israel emerges from the trauma of October 7, there is an understandable desire to set aside the bitter disputes that divided us in 2023. Yet paradoxically, the need to reform Israel’s judicial system has only grown more urgent.

The fundamental problem remains: Israel’s judiciary wields power far beyond what exists in any other democracy, with virtually no checks or balances on the court. In other democracies, courts can only hear cases brought by those directly affected by government decisions, not by any interested party. Political matters like foreign policy and military decisions are considered non-justiciable. Courts can only strike down laws that violate specific constitutional provisions, not ad hoc principles that judges conjure as they go. And judges on constitutional courts are not effectively chosen by sitting judges. Finally, rulings by the attorney general are regarded as advisory, not binding on the government. Israel lacks all these standard democratic constraints on judicial power.

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