Bill aims to salvage laws struck down by Israel´s Supreme Court (HA´ARETZ NEWS) By Tomer Zarchin 04/08/12)
Source: http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/bill-aims-to-salvage-laws-struck-down-by-israel-s-supreme-court-1.423171
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A new bill proposed would allow the Knesset to reinstate a law that
had been struck down by the High Court of Justice with a majority of
only 65 votes.
The draft was published by the Justice Ministry late last week. Its
framers hope it will eventually be presented as the long-sought Basic
Law on Legislation. It contains a clause that would makes it easier
for the Knesset to sidestep High Court rulings declaring laws
unconstitutional.
This bill differs from one recommended by a public commission
convened in 2004 to study the issue. That committee recommended a
majority of at least 70 MKs to reinstate a law that had been struck
down by the High Court of Justice. It also recommended that even if
the law was revived, it could be extended only once for a period of
five years. The recommendation was accepted by then Supreme Court
President Justice Aharon Barak.
This bill, which is still at the memorandum stage (in which the
public can comment on it before is officially published as a bill by
the Justice Ministry ), as framed by Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman,
stipulates that a law would remain on the books despite the High
Court ruling, if the Knesset voted to do so by a majority of 65. It
could also be extended every five years indefinitely. Supreme Court
President Asher Grunis did not cooperate with Neeman on the framing
of the memorandum.
A Basic Law on Legislation, which would enshrine in law the various
stages of legislation that are currently mainly governed by Knesset
regulations, has not yet been enacted, partly because of political
disputes over the issue of how much power the Supreme Court should
have over the Knesset, and appropriate methods for the Knesset to
keep that power in check.
Late last year, Neeman publicly stated his intention to revive work
on a Basic Law on Legislation containing the clause to make it easier
to sidestep the Supreme Court. He did so when speaking in the Knesset
in response to a speech by then Supreme Court President Dorit
Beinisch at a conference on the dangers of politicians attacking
Supreme Court rulings and its justices.
"The Knesset has for years avoided passing a Basic Law on
Legislation," Neeman said, adding, "If the public has complaints
about this, they should be directed to the Knesset, which is the body
authorized to legislate a Basic Law that determines the standards,
limitations and criteria when and under what circumstances the
[Supreme] court determines that a law is disproportionate [or]
unconstitutional. The Knesset will intervene. I think the time has
come to reach broad agreement so it will be very clear what happens
when the court rules that a law is not valid."
A hearing on the constitutionality of a law will require a bench of
at least nine justices. The first hearing, before a bench of three
justices, will determine whether doubt exists on the validity of the
law. If there is, the expanded bench will convene to decide whether
the law should be struck down.
After the committee released its recommendations in 2004, another
committee discussed the same issue in 2006, during the period Haim
Ramon served as justice minister. That committee also called for a
majority of 70 MKs to reinstate a law that had been struck down by
the Supreme Court.
Then in 2008, under Justice Minister Daniel Friedmann, a bill was
promoted that would allow the Knesset to reinstate a law struck down
by the Supreme Court by a majority of only 61 MKs, as long as there
was a difference of at least five votes between the majority and the
minority. Then Attorney General Menachem Mazuz warned the cabinet
that such a bill was "problematic" because consensus would be too
narrow to make such a weighty decision. The public will be able to
respond to the current memorandum until the beginning of May. The
Justice Ministry will then move ahead to present it as a bill to the
Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, and from there to the
Knesset. (© Copyright 2012 Ha´aretz 04/08/12)
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