Coalition Party Leaders to Meet to Discuss Judicial Reform

YERUSHALAYIM

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu with Justice Minister Yariv Levin during a discussion in the assembly hall of the Knesset, March 1 (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The coalition party leaders are to meet Sunday evening to discuss the judicial reform bill.

The aim of the meeting is to come up with an alternative plan to the one previously proposed by the Knesset Constitution Committee. Sources involved in the negotiations say that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is pushing for a compromise on judicial reform, but Justice Minister Yariv Levin opposes it, demanding that the law changing the composition of the Judicial Selection Committee be approved without change.

The coming week promises to be eventful in the Knesset, where the coalition is poised to advance key elements of its judicial reform as well as a series of other laws.

In addition, several Likud officials expressed doubts about the adoption of the judicial reform before the end of the winter session of the Knesset, scheduled for April 2.

Likud MK Yuli Edelstein called for the legislation to be frozen to allow talks with the opposition, while Culture and Sports Minister Miki Zohar called for some form of a compromise.

Starting Sunday, the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee will hold four consecutive hearings to prepare the bill to give the government full control over all judicial appointments for its second and third review in the Knesset.

Following the coalition’s dismissal last week of President Yitzchak Herzog’s alternative judicial reform proposal, Netanyahu and other coalition leaders said the government would discuss various options to unilaterally moderate the current bill.

Other legislation to be submitted to the Knesset this week: a text authorizing Netanyahu to receive donations to finance his legal costs, another allowing Shas leader Rabbi Aryeh Deri to resume his post as minister despite the ban of the High Court, a bill to ensure that a Prime Minister cannot be forced to recuse himself due to a conflict of interest, and a bill allowing hospitals to ban people from bringing chametz during Pesach.

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