Hundreds of people rallied outside the Tel Aviv home of former chief justice Aharon Barak on Wednesday evening to show their support for the government’s planned drastic overhaul of the judiciary.

Barak, 86, has been a vocal critic of the changes and a day earlier had urged further mass protests against the overhaul.

Protesters held banners declaring that the High Court of Justice was “harming national security” and was a “dictatorship.”

The rally was organized by the right-wing Im Tirtzu group whose CEO Matan Peleg said in a statement that “the time has come for Aharon Barak to listen to the voices of the people and stop behaving like a legal dictator.”

“It is time to show responsibility,” Peleg said. “Not to trample on the will of the voter. The majority of the people chose legal reform, and even those who did not choose to reform the judicial system today understand the importance of reform and are working toward it. We must put an end to anarchism and reckless behavior.”

On Tuesday, as Israel was marking its annual Holocaust Remembrance Day, Barak gave an interview with Channel 13 in which he called on anti-government protesters to keep up their demonstrations, which have been held regularly since January.

“The demonstration needs to continue, it needs to grow,” he said, crediting the rallies with having compelled the government to pause the legislation and hold negotiations with opposition parties. He noted that the power to demonstrate is what minorities hold against the power of the majority in the Knesset.

Barak was born in 1936 in Lithuania and his family was forced to flee the invading forces of Nazi Germany.

אהרון ברק ביקש כל כך יפה אז הבאנו את המחאה עד למרפסת שלו.
בכל זאת איש מבוגר, חבל שיתאמץ. pic.twitter.com/c91b3BQ0eo

— Igal Malka – ???????????????????????? (@igal_malka) April 19, 2023

In January Barak said he was willing to go before a firing squad if it would stop the judicial shake-up. He also accused Justice Minister Yariv Levin, who is spearheading the plan, of having “assembled all the bad proposals… into a chain that is strangling Israeli democracy.” They provide for the “cancellation of judicial oversight,” he said, calling it the constitutional equivalent “of a coup with tanks.”

Last week, MK David Amsalem, who serves as a second minister within the Justice Ministry for the ruling Likud party, said that Barak and current Supreme Court President Esther Hayut should be charged with “an attempted coup.” Hayut also opposes the judicial reform.

Saturday once again saw tens of thousands of people rally in Tel Aviv and elsewhere, vowing not to let any part of the overhaul pass into law. Critics say the planned legislation will remove the court’s ability to act as a check against executive power and degrade Israel’s democratic character.

Proponents of the government’s overhaul plans say reforms are needed to rein in politically motivated judicial activism.

Coalition and opposition parties are holding negotiations to reach an agreement on the judicial plan hosted by President Isaac Herzog at his official residence in Jerusalem.

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Hundreds rally outside home of former chief justice Barak in defense of overhaul

24 15
20.04.2023

Hundreds of people rallied outside the Tel Aviv home of former chief justice Aharon Barak on Wednesday evening to show their support for the government’s planned drastic overhaul of the judiciary.

Barak, 86, has been a vocal critic of the changes and a day earlier had urged further mass protests against the overhaul.

Protesters held banners declaring that the High Court of Justice was “harming national security” and was a “dictatorship.”

The rally was organized by the right-wing Im Tirtzu group whose CEO Matan Peleg said in a statement that “the time has come for Aharon Barak to listen to the voices of the people and stop behaving like a legal dictator.”

“It is time to show responsibility,” Peleg said. “Not to trample on the will of the voter. The majority of the people chose legal reform, and even those who did not choose to reform the judicial system today understand the importance of reform and are working toward it. We must put an end to anarchism and reckless behavior.”

On Tuesday, as Israel was marking its annual Holocaust........

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