Israel's attorney general Gali Baharav Miara tells Benjamin Netanyahu to fire key ally Aryeh Deri
The Hindu
The letter by Attorney General Gali Baharav Miara is also likely to exacerbate a dispute over the power of the judicial system and the government's bid to overhaul it.
Israel's attorney general has told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu he must fire a key Cabinet ally, in a letter made public on January 19, following a Supreme Court ruling that disqualified him from serving as a government Minister.
The letter, sent shortly after Wednesday's court decision, compounds the pressure on Mr. Netanyahu to remove Aryeh Deri from the Cabinet and potentially destabilise his coalition government. The letter by Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara is also likely to exacerbate a dispute over the power of the judicial system and the government's bid to overhaul it.
Israel's Supreme Court ruled that Mr. Deri, a longtime Netanyahu ally who leads the government's third-largest party, cannot serve as a Cabinet Minister because of a tax fraud conviction. The court said Mr. Netanyahu must fire him. Mr. Deri currently serves as Interior and Health Minister.
“You must act according to the ruling and remove him from his position in the government,” Baharav-Miara told Mr. Netanyahu in her letter.
It wasn't immediately clear whether Mr. Netanyahu would abide by the court ruling. But as the dust settled a bit on Thursday, commentators said they expected Mr. Netanyahu to fire Mr. Deri and for the new government to somehow survive his absence. But the court’s ruling only deepened the rift over Israel's justice system.
Mr. Netanyahu's ultranationalist and ultra-Orthodox government — the most right-wing in Israeli history — has made overhauling the country's judiciary a centre piece of its agenda. It says a power imbalance has given judges and government legal advisers too much sway over law-making and governance.
The government wants to weaken the Supreme Court, making it difficult for it to overturn laws it deems unconstitutional. If it somehow does manage to overturn laws, Parliament could overrule the court's decision with 61 votes of the country's 120-seat Parliament. It has also proposed giving the government more control over how judges are chosen as well as limiting the independence of government legal advisors and allowing lawmakers to ignore their counsel.
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