Tens of thousands of protesters flocked to Tel Aviv and cities across Israel on Saturday to vent their opposition to Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government and its divisive plan to overhaul the country’s judicial system.
The mass protest — which has raged weekly since the start of the year — comes just ahead of Israel’s landmark 75th anniversary celebration.
The holiday honouring Israel’s founding in 1948, typically meant to be a display of national unity, has been marred by one of Israel’s gravest crises in its history.
Plans by Mr Netanyahu’s government to weaken the Supreme Court have outraged Israelis who see it as an assault on their country’s system of checks and balances and a threat to its very democracy.
“This is not about so-called judicial reform, it’s about democracy,” said Sheila Katz, head of the National Council of Jewish Women, from the rally in central Tel Aviv — a sea of blue-and-white national flags.
“In order for your sacred courts to protect the rights of all people, they must remain independent from politics.”
The protests have galvanised people across Israeli society. Thousands of officers in elite reserve units of the military have said they will refuse to report for duty. High-tech business leaders and the security establishment have come out against the proposal. Trade unions have called for a general strike.
US president Joe Biden, the leader of Israel’s most crucial ally, has even publicly rebuffed Mr Netanyahu, telling him that he “cannot continue down this road”.
Furious public protests last month brought Israeli cities to a standstill and threatened to shut down the economy, compelling Mr Netanyahu to delay the plan in hopes of finding a compromise.
But protesters have been undeterred. Crowds of Israelis chanting “Shame!” have flooded the streets in the weeks after Mr Netanyahu backed down, demanding that the overhaul be scrapped altogether.
The plan would give Mr Netanyahu, who is on trial on corruption charges, and his partners in Israel’s most hardline coalition in its history the final say in appointing the nation’s judges.
It would also give parliament, which is controlled by his allies, authority to overturn Supreme Court decisions and limit the court’s ability to review laws.