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20 Teves 5764 - January 14, 2004 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
Widespread Criticism of High Court Power Assertion
by M Plaut and Yated Ne'eman Staff

Opposition in the legislative and executive branches of the Israeli government is building to the most recent attempt of the High Court to assert that it can decide on any issue that it sees fit to decide, that "everything is justiciable," as High Court President Aron Barak has said on many occasions.

On Tuesday afternoon the Knesset plenum was to hold a special session, called by Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin and the chairman of the Knesset Committee Ronny Bar On, to discuss the recent rulings by the High Court of Justice. Two rulings in particular rankled the legislators. One case was an appeal to the Court by parents of children with special educational needs, demanding that the Court force the government to live up to its legal responsibility to provide funding to allow their children to participate in the regular education system. The second case was an order issued by the Court last week ordering the government to clearly define within 10 days what "living with human dignity" means. The second case was the most controversial.

According to the Court, the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom requires the government to ensure that every citizen can live with dignity, and this includes having sufficient money to do so. The Court wants to be able to evaluate whether recent cuts in guaranteed income benefits for the poor do not violate the Basic Law on Human Dignity and Freedom.

At least three different research bodies have suggested different definitions of what living with dignity means. The Court has asked the Government to submit what it considers the definition of dignity. If the government does not do so, the Court threatened to use one of the definitions that other bodies submitted to it.

However, the most telling objection, which was even voiced in an editorial in Ha'aretz, a paper that usually supports the High Court, was that these matters are best left to the executive and legislative branches of government. As many commentators noted, the power of the purse is the most basic power of the legislature.

Rivlin, the Knesset Speaker, told Ha'aretz that the High Court had overstepped its authority in both cases. "These matters are at the very heart of the executive and legislative branches. The Supreme Court cannot suggest monetary alternatives for items it decides should not be cut," Rivlin argued.

"There is no democratic country in which the court determines policy and priorities. This is not its jurisdiction; it is the authority of the government and Knesset. It is a primary duty of the government and parliament to define social rights. If the High Court interferes in determining social conditions, tomorrow they'll also want to decide what the size of the defense budget should be," the Knesset speaker added.

Attorney Uriel Lynn, who served as chairman of the Knesset's Constitution, Law and Justice Committee at the time that the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty was passed, claims that the committee had no intention of including a section on social rights in the legislation.

Lynn told Ha'aretz, "We never imagined that the budgetary allocations for social rights would be brought into Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty, via the back door. Social rights are a subject that is under the government's authority, and the government is charged with distributing resources as it sees fit.

"The High Court does not have the authority to examine the issue of how the nation's resources are divided. The judicial branch has grossly overstepped its authority."

Writing in the Jerusalem Post, veteran commentator Evelyn Gordon noted that this interpretation requires a highly forced reading of the Basic Law in question. The closest the law comes to mentioning a right to live in dignity is in Article 2: "There shall be no violation of the life, body or dignity of any person as such," and Article 4, "All persons are entitled to protection of their life, body and dignity."

Certainly the most reasonable interpretation of these clauses is that the state must not do something that will violate dignity, and not that it must provide every citizen with a minimum income determined by the Court.

She also points out that the dignity guaranteed must be financed by taking the property of other citizens through taxes, in express violation of Article 3 ("There shall be no violation of the property of a person"). The government has no other source of money.

Moreover Gordon argues that the approach of the Court was specifically rejected by the Knesset on numerous occasions at the time of passage of the law and in subsequent years.

She writes, "Since 1948, the Knesset has considered no less than 15 proposed Basic Laws on social rights, all of which sought to define employment, education, health care and welfare as constitutional rights. One of these was submitted by the Justice Ministry in the early 1990s alongside Human Dignity and Freedom, proving that the jurists who drafted Human Dignity and Freedom did not consider it to encompass a right to welfare payments.

"MKs have submitted at least four others since Human Dignity and Freedom was enacted in 1992; MKs Yuli Tamir (Labor) and Eti Livni (Shinui) are currently working on yet another, which would guarantee all citizens `a decent level of social security, health and social welfare.' Thus Knesset members clearly share the ministry's view that these rights are not covered by Human Dignity and Freedom; if they were, a separate Basic Law on the subject would not be needed.

"Even more telling, however, is that of the 15 bills submitted on this subject since 1948, not a single one even succeeded in passing its first reading. This demonstrates that not only did the Knesset that enacted Human Dignity and Freedom oppose according welfare payments' constitutional status (that same Knesset rejected the accompanying Basic Law on social rights), a majority of virtually every Knesset since the establishment of the state has opposed such a move."

Rivlin has criticized the Court along these lines almost since he became Speaker.

For many years the chareidim were the only ones who complained about the encroachment of the High Court on areas not properly in its domain. Chareidi analysts warned that if the Court was not restrained, it would eventually impinge not only on religious rights, but on other areas as well. This forecast seems to be coming true now.

 

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