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Basic Laws of Israel

The Basic Laws of Israel (Hebrew: חוקי היסוד, romanizedḤukey HaYesod) are fourteen quasi-constitutional laws of the State of Israel, some of which can only be changed by a supermajority vote in the Knesset (with varying requirements for different Basic Laws and sections). Many of these laws are based on the individual liberties that were outlined in the Israeli Declaration of Independence.[1] The Basic Laws deal with the formation and role of the principal institutions of the state, and with the relations between the state's authorities. They also protect the country's civil rights, although some of these rights were earlier protected at common law by the Supreme Court of Israel.[2] The Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty enjoys super-legal status, giving the Supreme Court the authority to disqualify any law contradicting it, as well as protection from Emergency Regulations.[3][4]

Israeli Supreme Court, 50th anniversary celebration

The Basic Laws were intended to be draft chapters of a future Israeli constitution,[5] which has been postponed since 1950; they act as a de facto constitution until their future incorporation into a formal, unitary, written constitution.[6] Israel is one of six countries (along with New Zealand, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Canada, and the United Kingdom) that operate entirely or in part according to an uncodified constitution consisting of both material constitutional law (based upon cases and precedents), common law, and the provisions of these formal statutes.

Background edit

 
Cover page for Israeli Constitution draft proposed by the Institute for Zionist Strategies

The State of Israel has an uncodified constitution. Instead of a formal written constitution, and in accordance with the Harari Decision (הַחְלָטַת הֲרָרִי‎) of 13 June 1950 adopted by the Israeli Constituent Assembly (the First Knesset), the State of Israel has enacted several Basic Laws of Israel dealing with government arrangements and with human rights. The Israeli Supreme Court President Aharon Barak ruled that the Basic Laws should be considered the state's constitution,[7] and that became the common approach throughout his tenure (1995-2006). Opponents of this approach included Barak's colleague, Supreme Court Justice Mishael Cheshin.[7]

According to Israel's Declaration of Independence of 14 May 1948, a constituent assembly should have prepared a constitution by 1 October 1948. The delay and the eventual decision on 13 June 1950 to legislate a constitution chapter by chapter, resulted primarily from the inability of different groups in Israeli society to agree on the purpose of the state, on the state's identity, and on a long-term vision. Another factor was the opposition of David Ben-Gurion[8][9] (Prime Minister 1948-1954 and 1955-1963), who thought that a formal written constitution would allow the Israeli Supreme Court to overrule his socialist policies.[10] Furthermore, Ben Gurion aimed to shift towards a majoritarian election system, and adopting a constitution would have entrenched the existing proportional representation system.[11]

Various[quantify] bodies in Israel have called for the enactment of a formal constitution as a single document, and have submitted ideas and drafts for consideration. These calls increased during the 2023 anti-judicial reform protests, when multiple opposition figures and civil society organizations proposed the codification of the Basic Laws into a formal constitutiton.[12]

The Israeli Declaration of Independence stated that a formal constitution would be formulated and adopted no later than 1 October 1948.[13] The deadline set in the declaration of independence proved unrealistic in light of the war between the new state and its Arab neighbors. General elections eventually took place on 25 January 1949 in order to elect a Constituent Assembly which would approve the new state's constitution.

The Constituent Assembly convened in February 1949. It held several discussions about the constitution without reaching an agreement. After only four meetings, on 16 February 1949 it adopted the Transition Law, by which means it became the "First Knesset".[14] Because the Constituent Assembly did not prepare a constitution for Israel, the Knesset is the heir of the Assembly for the purpose of fulfilling this function.[14]

The Basic Laws do not cover all constitutional issues, and there is no deadline set for the completion of the process of merging them into one comprehensive constitution. There is no clear rule determining the precedence of Basic Laws over regular legislation, and in many cases, such issues are left to interpretation by the judicial system.[citation needed]

The "Constitutional Revolution" and the development of judicial review edit

The Israeli constitution prior to 1992 edit

In 1950 the First Knesset came to what was called the Harari Decision. Rather than draft a full constitution immediately, they would postpone the work, charging the Knesset's Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee with drafting the document piecemeal. Each chapter would be called a Basic Law, and when all had been written they would be compiled into a complete constitution.[15]

Between 1958 and 1988 the Knesset passed nine Basic Laws, all of which pertained to the institutions of state.

The power of judicial review is not addressed in Basic Law: The Judiciary, or elsewhere in Israel’s Basic Laws.[16] Prior to 1992, the Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, rejected multiple opportunities to claim the power of judicial review. Just after Israel’s founding, in the 1948 Ziv case the Court ruled against interpreting Israel’s Declaration of Independence as the nation’s constitutional document, and in 1970, the Court reaffirmed this principle in the Rogozinsky case.[17][18][19] In Rogozinsky, the Court went so far as to explicitly deny itself the right to judicial review of ordinary Knesset legislation.[20]

However, near the same time as the Rogozinsky case, the Court began to indicate a different posture with regard to judicial review of entrenched Basic Laws. At the time, the only provision in the Basic Laws that was entrenched was section 4 of Basic Law: The Knesset, which required “general, national, direct, equal, secret, and proportional elections” for the Knesset, and required an absolute majority of 61 MKs to amend.[21] In its 1969 Bergman decision, the Supreme Court implicitly assumed the power of substantive judicial review, invalidating a public financing law that denied public funds to political parties not represented in the previous Knesset on the grounds that the law violated section 4.[22] The Court grounded its power to strike down the law in the fact that the Knesset had failed to pass it with the absolute majority required, in the process upholding the principle of entrenchment in Israeli constitutional law.[23] While this created only a procedural requirement that the Knesset had to meet to enact the law—namely reaching an absolute majority when passing a law in conflict with it—it also demonstrated the Court’s willingness to determine whether Knesset legislation met the substantive requirements of Basic Laws.

However, the Court explicitly refused to endorse the principle of judicial review of all Knesset legislation, explicitly stating that it did not intend for the Bergman decision to address that point.[24] It further reinforced this stance in its 1974 Negev decision, clarifying that the Court lacked the power of judicial review in cases where the standard for potential review was an unentrenched ordinary law or Basic Law.[25][26]

The Constitutional Revolution of 1992–1995 edit

In 1992 the Knesset passed the first two Basic Laws that related to human rights and to the basis of the Supreme Court's recently declared[clarification needed] powers of judicial review. These are "Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty" and "Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation". Both Basic Laws contain clauses prohibiting the violation of the rights they enumerate, “except by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel, enacted for a proper purpose, and to an extent no greater than is required.” This limitations clause is contained in section 8 of Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom and section 4 of Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation.[27][28]

These were passed by votes of 32–21 and 23–0 respectively, and Knesset debates indicate that many MKs were not aware that these laws pertained to the constitutional entrenchment of any rights nor that they affected the status of judicial review in Israel.[29] However, Justice Aharon Barak, who would become President of the Supreme Court, explicitly declared that the passage of these Basic Laws had initiated a constitutional revolution in Israel. Barak argued that Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation, which was explicitly entrenched to require a 61 MK majority to amend under section 7, and Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom—which was not entrenched in the same way, but in Barak’s view required the Knesset to explicitly declare its intent to violate the law, in a similar manner to the Canadian Bill of Rights’ “notwithstanding clause”—created a set of generalities and conflicting principles in the Basic Laws, which meant that it fell to the judiciary to interpret and “[give] content to” those laws.[30][31][32]

Barak’s declaration of a “constitutional revolution” presaged his majority opinion in the landmark 1995 Bank Mizrahi v. Migdal Cooperative Village case. Bank Mizrahi declared that due to the limitations clauses included in the 1992 Basic Laws, the Basic Laws now formed a written constitution that the courts had the power to uphold via judicial review.[33][34] The more specific holding of Bank Mizrahi was that Knesset legislation that violates the limitations clauses of Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation and Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom is void no matter what majority passed the law, rejecting its position in Bergman and elaborated in Negev that only constitutionally entrenched Basic Laws empowered the court to exercise judicial review.[35]

The Court’s main reasoning was that the Knesset holds two distinct roles within the Israeli state depending on the type of legislation it is enacting. In addition to its position as the legislative branch, which it occupies when dealing with ordinary legislation, the Knesset acts as a constituent assembly empowered to write a formal constitution for Israel when passing Basic Laws, deriving this authority from the First Knesset’s Harari Decision to pass on the task of writing the constitution to the Second Knesset.[36]

This marked a significant departure from the British system of parliamentary sovereignty that Israel inherited and practiced prior to the Constitutional Revolution, as it permitted a Knesset to bind its successors.[37] Outgoing Supreme Court President Meir Shamgar’s concurring opinion in Bank Mizrahi did not recognize the Knesset’s role as a constituent assembly and instead argued that the Knesset had an explicit power of self-limitation even when acting in its legislative capacity, but this interpretive approach has not been cited in subsequent cases.[38]

The cumulative impact of the Bank Mizrahi decision was that it established judicial review of ordinary Knesset legislation, significantly curbing the Knesset’s parliamentary supremacy, and according to some Israeli constitutional scholars, fully converted the Israeli constitution from an unwritten constitution to a formal, written constitution, albeit an incomplete one.[39]

Impacts of the Constitutional Revolution on the structure of the Israeli state edit

The limitations clauses function as both limitations on human rights, but also as an acknowledgement of substantive entrenchment, rather than the purely procedural entrenchment of section 4 of Basic Law: The Knesset recognized in the Bergman decision. Previously, the Knesset could repeal even Basic Laws simply through passing conflicting statutes, by virtue of parliamentary sovereignty. By contrast, Bank Mizrahi empowered the Knesset which passed the limitations clauses to bind future Knesset sessions to comply with those clauses or have their legislation struck down via judicial review.[40] In this approach to entrenchment, the current Israeli system mirrors the entrenchment of the Canadian Bill of Rights, as both laws are weakly entrenched such that while Knesset and Canadian parliament legislation can be struck down by their respective courts for failing to comply with their respective entrenched laws, both parliaments can override this provision by either explicitly stating their intent to do so or amending the conflicting laws themselves, depending on the case.[41] Shortly after the Bank Mizrahi decision, the Knesset declared that it would review proposed laws for compliance with other Basic Laws going forward, and coalition government agreements since this case have included the stipulation that no party would attempt to modify Basic Laws without the agreement of all coalition partners.[42]

Procedure for amendment edit

The Knesset can pass any law by a simple majority, even one that might arguably conflict with a Basic Laws of Israel, unless the basic law has specific conditions for its modification. Basic laws that include specific conditions include the following:

  • Article 4 of the Basic Law of the Knesset, on the electoral system, can be amended only by a majority of 61 of the 120 Knesset members.
  • Article 44, which prevents the amendment of the law by an Emergency Regulation, can be amended only by a majority of 80 members.

A majority of the Knesset members can amend the Basic Laws on the government and on freedom of occupation.[43]

List of the Basic Laws of Israel edit

Year passed Basic Law Description
1958; updated in 1987 The Knesset States legislative functions of the parliament of the state.
1960 Israel Lands Ensures state lands remain national property.
1964 The President of the State Deals with status, election, qualifications, powers, and procedures of work of the President of the State.
1968 The Government (Replaced by the 1992 law, and then restored, with amendments, by the 2001 law.)
1975 The State Economy Regulates payments made by, and to, the state. Authority to mint currency.
1976 The Military Upholds constitutional and legal basis for the operation of the Israel Defense Forces. Subordinates military forces to the government, deals with enlistment, and states that no extra-legal armed force outside the Israel Defense Forces may be set up or maintained.
1980 Jerusalem Law Establishes the status of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel; secures the integrity and unity of Jerusalem; deals with holy places; secures rights of members of all religions; grants special preference with regards to development.
1984 The Judiciary Deals with authority, institutions, principle of independence, openness, appointment, qualifications, and powers of the judiciary.
1988 The State Comptroller Deals with the powers, tasks, and duties of supervisor of government bodies, ministries, institutions, authorities, agencies, persons, and bodies operating on behalf of the state.
1992 Human Dignity and Liberty Declares that basic human rights in Israel are based on the recognition of the value of man, the sanctity of his life, and the fact that he is free. Defines human freedom as right to leave and enter the country, privacy (including speech, writings, and notes), intimacy, and protection from unlawful searches of one's person or property. Any violation of this right shall be "by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel, enacted for a proper purpose, and to an extent no greater than is required". This law also includes instruction regarding its own permanence and protection from changes by means of emergency regulations.
1994 Freedom of Occupation Guarantees every Israel national or resident's "right to engage in any occupation, profession, or trade". Any violation of this right shall be "by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel, enacted for a proper purpose, and to an extent no greater than is required". This law also includes instruction regarding its own permanence and protection from changes by means of emergency regulations.
2001 The Government Overturns its own 1992 addition, the direct election of the prime minister, and restores the 1968 system with some amendments.
2014 Referendum Establishes that if the Israeli government adopts a decision or signs an agreement stipulating that the laws, jurisdiction, and administrative authority of the State of Israel will no longer apply to a certain geographical area, such agreement or decision must either be adopted via a treaty approved by 80 MKs, or by an absolute majority vote in a referendum.[44] This means that Israeli sovereign territory (East Jerusalem, Golan Heights, and any land within the 1949 armistice lines), under Israeli law, can only be relinquished either through a treaty approved by over 80 MKs, in which case a referendum is not necessary, or, before a treaty is valid, it must be approved by an absolute majority vote in a referendum.[45]
2018 Nation-State Defines Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people.[46] The Nation-State Law also asserts that the Jewish people have the unique claim to national self-determination in the State of Israel, defines Hebrew as the official language of the state, and gives Arabic a special status in the state. It additionally defines the national symbols, holidays, and calendar of the state.[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Basic Laws". knesset.gov.il. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  2. ^ Gross, Aeyal (1998). "The Politics of Rights in Israeli Constitutional Law". Israel Studies. 3 (2): 80–118. doi:10.2979/ISR.1998.3.2.80. S2CID 146327714.
  3. ^ "Q&A on the Override Clause". en.idi.org.il. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  4. ^ "Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty". Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  5. ^ Gavison, Ruth (1985). "The Controversy over Israel's Bill of Rights" (PDF). Israel Yearbook of Human Rights. 15: 113–154.
  6. ^ Dorner, Dalia (1999). "Does Israel Have a Constitution?". Saint Louis University Law Journal. 43: 1325–1366.
  7. ^ a b "United Mizrahi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village | Cardozo Israeli Supreme Court Project". versa.cardozo.yu.edu.
  8. ^ Orit Rozin "Forming a Collective Identity: The Debate over the Proposed Constitution, 1948–1950", Journal of Israeli History 26 (2), 2007, p. 251.
  9. ^ "Israel's Documented Story: Who Needs a Constitution?". Israelsdocuments.blogspot.com.au. 25 April 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  10. ^ "Israelis See Chance to Finally Write Nation's Constitution — The Wall Street Journal". apple.news. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  11. ^ "ההיסטוריה של התהליך החוקתי בישראל" [The history of the constitutional process in Israel]. www.idi.org.il (in Hebrew). 2000. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  12. ^ Starr, Michael (12 March 2023). "Why are calls for constitution – instead of reform – growing? - analysis". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  13. ^ "Declaration of Establishment of State of Israel". Mfa.gov.il. 14 May 1948. Retrieved 7 February 2020. [...] until the establishment of the elected, regular authorities of the State in accordance with the Constitution which shall be adopted by the Elected Constituent Assembly not later than 1 October 1948, the People's Council shall act as a Provisional Council of State, and its executive organ, the People's Administration, shall be the Provisional Government of the Jewish State, to be called "Israel".
  14. ^ a b "The Constituent Assembly". Knesset.gov.il. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  15. ^ "Israel's Supreme Court & the Power of Judicial Review". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 7 May 2017. Basic laws functioning as a constitution.
  16. ^ Basic Law: The Judiciary (1984). Basic law. The judiciary mfa.gov.il
  17. ^ Suzi Navot, The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis, Constitutional Systems of The World (Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014), 13 – 14
  18. ^ Ziv v. Gubernick, P.D. 1 85 (HCJ 1948)
  19. ^ Rogozinsky v. State of Israel, IsrSC 26(1) 129, 1971 (CA 1971).
  20. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 17
  21. ^ "Basic Law: the Knesset". The Knesset. 1 May 2022 [Originally adopted 1958].
  22. ^ Bergman v. Minister of Finance, IsrSC 23(1) 963 (HCJ 1969).
  23. ^ Navot, “The Migration of Proportionality: From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections—The Case of Israel,” 4.
  24. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 7.
  25. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 22.
  26. ^ 'Negev' - Automobile Service Stations Ltd v. State of Israel Ltd, IsrSC 28(1) 640 (HCJ 1974).
  27. ^ “Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty” (1992), sec. 8, https://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFA-Archive/1992/Pages/Basic%20Law-%20Human%20Dignity%20and%20Liberty-.aspx
  28. ^ Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation” (1994), sec. 4 mfa.gov.il
  29. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 30.
  30. ^ Aharon Barak, “A Constitutional Revolution: Israel’s Basic Laws,” Constitutional Forum / Forum Constitutionnel4, no. 1–4 (October 11, 2011): 1993, doi:10.21991/C92D47
  31. ^ Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation, sec. 7
  32. ^ Stephen Gardbaum, “The New Commonwealth Model of Constitutionalism,” The American Journal of Comparative Law49, no. 4 (Autumn 2001): 720–22, doi:10.2307/841055
  33. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 31.
  34. ^ United Mizrachi Bank v. Migdal Cooperative Village, 49(4) PD 221 (CA 1995).
  35. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 31-32.
  36. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 33-34.
  37. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 17.
  38. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 35.
  39. ^ Navot, Suzi. “The Migration of Proportionality: From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections — The Case of Israel.” In Human Rights Human Rights in Contemporary World: Essays in Honour of Professor Leszek Garlicki, edited by Marek Zubik, 1. Auflage. Warsaw: Wadywnictwo Sejmowe, 2017, 2-3.
  40. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014, 29.
  41. ^ Navot, Suzi. “The Migration of Proportionality: From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections — The Case of Israel.” In Human Rights Human Rights in Contemporary World: Essays in Honour of Professor Leszek Garlicki, edited by Marek Zubik, 1. Auflage. Warsaw: Wadywnictwo Sejmowe, 2017, 11.
  42. ^ Navot, Suzi. The Constitution of Israel: A Contextual Analysis. Constitutional Systems of The World. Oxford, United Kingdom ; Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing, 2014.
  43. ^ "Basic Laws - Introduction". The Knesset. 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  44. ^ Harkov, Lahav (12 March 2014). "Knesset passes first Basic Law in 22 years: Referendum on land concessions". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  45. ^ Harkov, Lahav (12 February 2014). "Bill reinforcing referendum on peace talks moves toward final vote". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  46. ^ Wootliff, Raoul (18 July 2018). "Israel passes Jewish state law, enshrining "national home of the Jewish people"". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  47. ^ (PDF). The Knesset: Laws. State of Israel. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2018.

Sources edit

  • Cohen, Asher; Bernard Susser (2000). Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity: The Secular-Religious Impasse. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801863455.
  • Jacobsohn, Gary J. (1994). Apple of Gold: Constitutionalism in Israel and the United States. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691029535.
  • Mazie, Steven V (2006). Israel's Higher Law: Religion and Liberal Democracy in the Jewish State. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0739114858.
  • The Existing Basic Laws: Full Texts (English), the Knesset (Israeli Parliament) website, official translations - NOTE: The 1968 Basic Law: the Government translation is missing provisions, probably amendments added later on. As opposed to the 1968 and 2001 basic Law: the Government translations, the 1992 Basic Law: the Government uses the term "Acting PM" to refer to an "Interim Prime Minister" as well. The 2001 Law, which is in effect, present all provision in the translation, however, there are some lines missing. It is recommended to use the Hebrew laws official publications in the Knesset website.
  • Jewish Law in the Debates of the Knesset (HaMishpat HaIvri b'Chakikat HaKneset) edited by Prof. Nahum Rakover. 2 vols., 1310 pp. 159-190.

External links edit

  • Basic Laws Knesset website. Introduction and summaries
  • Basic Laws Knesset website. List with links to full texts
  • The Constitution Knesset website, 2007. Explains why there isn't a constitution
  • Constitution for Israel Knesset website, 2014. Project portal for the drafting of a constitution.

basic, laws, israel, hebrew, חוקי, היסוד, romanized, Ḥukey, hayesod, fourteen, quasi, constitutional, laws, state, israel, some, which, only, changed, supermajority, vote, knesset, with, varying, requirements, different, basic, laws, sections, many, these, law. The Basic Laws of Israel Hebrew חוקי היסוד romanized Ḥukey HaYesod are fourteen quasi constitutional laws of the State of Israel some of which can only be changed by a supermajority vote in the Knesset with varying requirements for different Basic Laws and sections Many of these laws are based on the individual liberties that were outlined in the Israeli Declaration of Independence 1 The Basic Laws deal with the formation and role of the principal institutions of the state and with the relations between the state s authorities They also protect the country s civil rights although some of these rights were earlier protected at common law by the Supreme Court of Israel 2 The Basic Law Human Dignity and Liberty enjoys super legal status giving the Supreme Court the authority to disqualify any law contradicting it as well as protection from Emergency Regulations 3 4 Israeli Supreme Court 50th anniversary celebration The Basic Laws were intended to be draft chapters of a future Israeli constitution 5 which has been postponed since 1950 they act as a de facto constitution until their future incorporation into a formal unitary written constitution 6 Israel is one of six countries along with New Zealand San Marino Saudi Arabia Canada and the United Kingdom that operate entirely or in part according to an uncodified constitution consisting of both material constitutional law based upon cases and precedents common law and the provisions of these formal statutes Contents 1 Background 2 The Constitutional Revolution and the development of judicial review 2 1 The Israeli constitution prior to 1992 2 2 The Constitutional Revolution of 1992 1995 2 3 Impacts of the Constitutional Revolution on the structure of the Israeli state 3 Procedure for amendment 4 List of the Basic Laws of Israel 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp Cover page for Israeli Constitution draft proposed by the Institute for Zionist Strategies The State of Israel has an uncodified constitution Instead of a formal written constitution and in accordance with the Harari Decision ה ח ל ט ת ה ר ר י of 13 June 1950 adopted by the Israeli Constituent Assembly the First Knesset the State of Israel has enacted several Basic Laws of Israel dealing with government arrangements and with human rights The Israeli Supreme Court President Aharon Barak ruled that the Basic Laws should be considered the state s constitution 7 and that became the common approach throughout his tenure 1995 2006 Opponents of this approach included Barak s colleague Supreme Court Justice Mishael Cheshin 7 According to Israel s Declaration of Independence of 14 May 1948 a constituent assembly should have prepared a constitution by 1 October 1948 The delay and the eventual decision on 13 June 1950 to legislate a constitution chapter by chapter resulted primarily from the inability of different groups in Israeli society to agree on the purpose of the state on the state s identity and on a long term vision Another factor was the opposition of David Ben Gurion 8 9 Prime Minister 1948 1954 and 1955 1963 who thought that a formal written constitution would allow the Israeli Supreme Court to overrule his socialist policies 10 Furthermore Ben Gurion aimed to shift towards a majoritarian election system and adopting a constitution would have entrenched the existing proportional representation system 11 Various quantify bodies in Israel have called for the enactment of a formal constitution as a single document and have submitted ideas and drafts for consideration These calls increased during the 2023 anti judicial reform protests when multiple opposition figures and civil society organizations proposed the codification of the Basic Laws into a formal constitutiton 12 The Israeli Declaration of Independence stated that a formal constitution would be formulated and adopted no later than 1 October 1948 13 The deadline set in the declaration of independence proved unrealistic in light of the war between the new state and its Arab neighbors General elections eventually took place on 25 January 1949 in order to elect a Constituent Assembly which would approve the new state s constitution The Constituent Assembly convened in February 1949 It held several discussions about the constitution without reaching an agreement After only four meetings on 16 February 1949 it adopted the Transition Law by which means it became the First Knesset 14 Because the Constituent Assembly did not prepare a constitution for Israel the Knesset is the heir of the Assembly for the purpose of fulfilling this function 14 The Basic Laws do not cover all constitutional issues and there is no deadline set for the completion of the process of merging them into one comprehensive constitution There is no clear rule determining the precedence of Basic Laws over regular legislation and in many cases such issues are left to interpretation by the judicial system citation needed The Constitutional Revolution and the development of judicial review editThe Israeli constitution prior to 1992 edit In 1950 the First Knesset came to what was called the Harari Decision Rather than draft a full constitution immediately they would postpone the work charging the Knesset s Constitution Law and Justice Committee with drafting the document piecemeal Each chapter would be called a Basic Law and when all had been written they would be compiled into a complete constitution 15 Between 1958 and 1988 the Knesset passed nine Basic Laws all of which pertained to the institutions of state The power of judicial review is not addressed in Basic Law The Judiciary or elsewhere in Israel s Basic Laws 16 Prior to 1992 the Supreme Court sitting as the High Court of Justice rejected multiple opportunities to claim the power of judicial review Just after Israel s founding in the 1948 Ziv case the Court ruled against interpreting Israel s Declaration of Independence as the nation s constitutional document and in 1970 the Court reaffirmed this principle in the Rogozinsky case 17 18 19 In Rogozinsky the Court went so far as to explicitly deny itself the right to judicial review of ordinary Knesset legislation 20 However near the same time as the Rogozinsky case the Court began to indicate a different posture with regard to judicial review of entrenched Basic Laws At the time the only provision in the Basic Laws that was entrenched was section 4 of Basic Law The Knesset which required general national direct equal secret and proportional elections for the Knesset and required an absolute majority of 61 MKs to amend 21 In its 1969 Bergman decision the Supreme Court implicitly assumed the power of substantive judicial review invalidating a public financing law that denied public funds to political parties not represented in the previous Knesset on the grounds that the law violated section 4 22 The Court grounded its power to strike down the law in the fact that the Knesset had failed to pass it with the absolute majority required in the process upholding the principle of entrenchment in Israeli constitutional law 23 While this created only a procedural requirement that the Knesset had to meet to enact the law namely reaching an absolute majority when passing a law in conflict with it it also demonstrated the Court s willingness to determine whether Knesset legislation met the substantive requirements of Basic Laws However the Court explicitly refused to endorse the principle of judicial review of all Knesset legislation explicitly stating that it did not intend for the Bergman decision to address that point 24 It further reinforced this stance in its 1974 Negev decision clarifying that the Court lacked the power of judicial review in cases where the standard for potential review was an unentrenched ordinary law or Basic Law 25 26 The Constitutional Revolution of 1992 1995 edit In 1992 the Knesset passed the first two Basic Laws that related to human rights and to the basis of the Supreme Court s recently declared clarification needed powers of judicial review These are Basic Law Human Dignity and Liberty and Basic Law Freedom of Occupation Both Basic Laws contain clauses prohibiting the violation of the rights they enumerate except by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel enacted for a proper purpose and to an extent no greater than is required This limitations clause is contained in section 8 of Basic Law Human Dignity and Freedom and section 4 of Basic Law Freedom of Occupation 27 28 These were passed by votes of 32 21 and 23 0 respectively and Knesset debates indicate that many MKs were not aware that these laws pertained to the constitutional entrenchment of any rights nor that they affected the status of judicial review in Israel 29 However Justice Aharon Barak who would become President of the Supreme Court explicitly declared that the passage of these Basic Laws had initiated a constitutional revolution in Israel Barak argued that Basic Law Freedom of Occupation which was explicitly entrenched to require a 61 MK majority to amend under section 7 and Basic Law Human Dignity and Freedom which was not entrenched in the same way but in Barak s view required the Knesset to explicitly declare its intent to violate the law in a similar manner to the Canadian Bill of Rights notwithstanding clause created a set of generalities and conflicting principles in the Basic Laws which meant that it fell to the judiciary to interpret and give content to those laws 30 31 32 Barak s declaration of a constitutional revolution presaged his majority opinion in the landmark 1995 Bank Mizrahi v Migdal Cooperative Village case Bank Mizrahi declared that due to the limitations clauses included in the 1992 Basic Laws the Basic Laws now formed a written constitution that the courts had the power to uphold via judicial review 33 34 The more specific holding of Bank Mizrahi was that Knesset legislation that violates the limitations clauses of Basic Law Freedom of Occupation and Basic Law Human Dignity and Freedom is void no matter what majority passed the law rejecting its position in Bergman and elaborated in Negev that only constitutionally entrenched Basic Laws empowered the court to exercise judicial review 35 The Court s main reasoning was that the Knesset holds two distinct roles within the Israeli state depending on the type of legislation it is enacting In addition to its position as the legislative branch which it occupies when dealing with ordinary legislation the Knesset acts as a constituent assembly empowered to write a formal constitution for Israel when passing Basic Laws deriving this authority from the First Knesset s Harari Decision to pass on the task of writing the constitution to the Second Knesset 36 This marked a significant departure from the British system of parliamentary sovereignty that Israel inherited and practiced prior to the Constitutional Revolution as it permitted a Knesset to bind its successors 37 Outgoing Supreme Court President Meir Shamgar s concurring opinion in Bank Mizrahi did not recognize the Knesset s role as a constituent assembly and instead argued that the Knesset had an explicit power of self limitation even when acting in its legislative capacity but this interpretive approach has not been cited in subsequent cases 38 The cumulative impact of the Bank Mizrahi decision was that it established judicial review of ordinary Knesset legislation significantly curbing the Knesset s parliamentary supremacy and according to some Israeli constitutional scholars fully converted the Israeli constitution from an unwritten constitution to a formal written constitution albeit an incomplete one 39 Impacts of the Constitutional Revolution on the structure of the Israeli state edit The limitations clauses function as both limitations on human rights but also as an acknowledgement of substantive entrenchment rather than the purely procedural entrenchment of section 4 of Basic Law The Knesset recognized in the Bergman decision Previously the Knesset could repeal even Basic Laws simply through passing conflicting statutes by virtue of parliamentary sovereignty By contrast Bank Mizrahi empowered the Knesset which passed the limitations clauses to bind future Knesset sessions to comply with those clauses or have their legislation struck down via judicial review 40 In this approach to entrenchment the current Israeli system mirrors the entrenchment of the Canadian Bill of Rights as both laws are weakly entrenched such that while Knesset and Canadian parliament legislation can be struck down by their respective courts for failing to comply with their respective entrenched laws both parliaments can override this provision by either explicitly stating their intent to do so or amending the conflicting laws themselves depending on the case 41 Shortly after the Bank Mizrahi decision the Knesset declared that it would review proposed laws for compliance with other Basic Laws going forward and coalition government agreements since this case have included the stipulation that no party would attempt to modify Basic Laws without the agreement of all coalition partners 42 Procedure for amendment editSee also Constitutional amendment The Knesset can pass any law by a simple majority even one that might arguably conflict with a Basic Laws of Israel unless the basic law has specific conditions for its modification Basic laws that include specific conditions include the following Article 4 of the Basic Law of the Knesset on the electoral system can be amended only by a majority of 61 of the 120 Knesset members Article 44 which prevents the amendment of the law by an Emergency Regulation can be amended only by a majority of 80 members A majority of the Knesset members can amend the Basic Laws on the government and on freedom of occupation 43 List of the Basic Laws of Israel editYear passed Basic Law Description 1958 updated in 1987 The Knesset States legislative functions of the parliament of the state 1960 Israel Lands Ensures state lands remain national property 1964 The President of the State Deals with status election qualifications powers and procedures of work of the President of the State 1968 The Government Replaced by the 1992 law and then restored with amendments by the 2001 law 1975 The State Economy Regulates payments made by and to the state Authority to mint currency 1976 The Military Upholds constitutional and legal basis for the operation of the Israel Defense Forces Subordinates military forces to the government deals with enlistment and states that no extra legal armed force outside the Israel Defense Forces may be set up or maintained 1980 Jerusalem Law Establishes the status of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel secures the integrity and unity of Jerusalem deals with holy places secures rights of members of all religions grants special preference with regards to development 1984 The Judiciary Deals with authority institutions principle of independence openness appointment qualifications and powers of the judiciary 1988 The State Comptroller Deals with the powers tasks and duties of supervisor of government bodies ministries institutions authorities agencies persons and bodies operating on behalf of the state 1992 Human Dignity and Liberty Declares that basic human rights in Israel are based on the recognition of the value of man the sanctity of his life and the fact that he is free Defines human freedom as right to leave and enter the country privacy including speech writings and notes intimacy and protection from unlawful searches of one s person or property Any violation of this right shall be by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel enacted for a proper purpose and to an extent no greater than is required This law also includes instruction regarding its own permanence and protection from changes by means of emergency regulations 1994 Freedom of Occupation Guarantees every Israel national or resident s right to engage in any occupation profession or trade Any violation of this right shall be by a law befitting the values of the State of Israel enacted for a proper purpose and to an extent no greater than is required This law also includes instruction regarding its own permanence and protection from changes by means of emergency regulations 2001 The Government Overturns its own 1992 addition the direct election of the prime minister and restores the 1968 system with some amendments 2014 Referendum Establishes that if the Israeli government adopts a decision or signs an agreement stipulating that the laws jurisdiction and administrative authority of the State of Israel will no longer apply to a certain geographical area such agreement or decision must either be adopted via a treaty approved by 80 MKs or by an absolute majority vote in a referendum 44 This means that Israeli sovereign territory East Jerusalem Golan Heights and any land within the 1949 armistice lines under Israeli law can only be relinquished either through a treaty approved by over 80 MKs in which case a referendum is not necessary or before a treaty is valid it must be approved by an absolute majority vote in a referendum 45 2018 Nation State Defines Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people 46 The Nation State Law also asserts that the Jewish people have the unique claim to national self determination in the State of Israel defines Hebrew as the official language of the state and gives Arabic a special status in the state It additionally defines the national symbols holidays and calendar of the state 47 See also editIsraeli nationality law Land and Property laws in Israel Law of Israel Law of ReturnReferences edit Basic Laws knesset gov il Retrieved 16 June 2018 Gross Aeyal 1998 The Politics of Rights in Israeli Constitutional Law Israel Studies 3 2 80 118 doi 10 2979 ISR 1998 3 2 80 S2CID 146327714 Q amp A on the Override Clause en idi org il Retrieved 22 August 2018 Basic Law Human Dignity and Liberty Retrieved 3 January 2014 Gavison Ruth 1985 The Controversy over Israel s Bill of Rights PDF Israel Yearbook of Human Rights 15 113 154 Dorner Dalia 1999 Does Israel Have a Constitution Saint Louis University Law Journal 43 1325 1366 a b United Mizrahi Bank v Migdal Cooperative Village Cardozo Israeli Supreme Court Project versa cardozo yu edu Orit Rozin Forming a Collective Identity The Debate over the Proposed Constitution 1948 1950 Journal of Israeli History 26 2 2007 p 251 Israel s Documented Story Who Needs a Constitution Israelsdocuments blogspot com au 25 April 2013 Retrieved 19 May 2015 Israelis See Chance to Finally Write Nation s Constitution The Wall Street Journal apple news Retrieved 3 April 2023 ההיסטוריה של התהליך החוקתי בישראל The history of the constitutional process in Israel www idi org il in Hebrew 2000 Retrieved 16 November 2023 Starr Michael 12 March 2023 Why are calls for constitution instead of reform growing analysis The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 13 March 2023 Declaration of Establishment of State of Israel Mfa gov il 14 May 1948 Retrieved 7 February 2020 until the establishment of the elected regular authorities of the State in accordance with the Constitution which shall be adopted by the Elected Constituent Assembly not later than 1 October 1948 the People s Council shall act as a Provisional Council of State and its executive organ the People s Administration shall be the Provisional Government of the Jewish State to be called Israel a b The Constituent Assembly Knesset gov il Retrieved 24 April 2012 Israel s Supreme Court amp the Power of Judicial Review Jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 7 May 2017 Basic laws functioning as a constitution Basic Law The Judiciary 1984 Basic law The judiciary mfa gov il Suzi Navot The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 13 14 Ziv v Gubernick P D 1 85 HCJ 1948 Rogozinsky v State of Israel IsrSC 26 1 129 1971 CA 1971 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 17 Basic Law the Knesset The Knesset 1 May 2022 Originally adopted 1958 Bergman v Minister of Finance IsrSC 23 1 963 HCJ 1969 Navot The Migration of Proportionality From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections The Case of Israel 4 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 7 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 22 Negev Automobile Service Stations Ltd v State of Israel Ltd IsrSC 28 1 640 HCJ 1974 Basic Law Human Dignity and Liberty 1992 sec 8 https www mfa gov il MFA MFA Archive 1992 Pages Basic 20Law 20Human 20Dignity 20and 20Liberty aspx Basic Law Freedom of Occupation 1994 sec 4 mfa gov il Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 30 Aharon Barak A Constitutional Revolution Israel s Basic Laws Constitutional Forum Forum Constitutionnel4 no 1 4 October 11 2011 1993 doi 10 21991 C92D47 Basic Law Freedom of Occupation sec 7 Stephen Gardbaum The New Commonwealth Model of Constitutionalism The American Journal of Comparative Law49 no 4 Autumn 2001 720 22 doi 10 2307 841055 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 31 United Mizrachi Bank v Migdal Cooperative Village 49 4 PD 221 CA 1995 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 31 32 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 33 34 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 17 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 35 Navot Suzi The Migration of Proportionality From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections The Case of Israel In Human Rights Human Rights in Contemporary World Essays in Honour of Professor Leszek Garlicki edited by Marek Zubik 1 Auflage Warsaw Wadywnictwo Sejmowe 2017 2 3 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 29 Navot Suzi The Migration of Proportionality From Human Rights to the Principle of Equality in Elections The Case of Israel In Human Rights Human Rights in Contemporary World Essays in Honour of Professor Leszek Garlicki edited by Marek Zubik 1 Auflage Warsaw Wadywnictwo Sejmowe 2017 11 Navot Suzi The Constitution of Israel A Contextual Analysis Constitutional Systems of The World Oxford United Kingdom Portland Oregon Hart Publishing 2014 Basic Laws Introduction The Knesset 2016 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Harkov Lahav 12 March 2014 Knesset passes first Basic Law in 22 years Referendum on land concessions The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 22 June 2015 Harkov Lahav 12 February 2014 Bill reinforcing referendum on peace talks moves toward final vote The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 19 May 2015 Wootliff Raoul 18 July 2018 Israel passes Jewish state law enshrining national home of the Jewish people The Times of Israel Retrieved 18 July 2018 Full text of Basic Law Israel as the Nation State of the Jewish People PDF The Knesset Laws State of Israel Archived from the original PDF on 10 April 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2018 Sources editCohen Asher Bernard Susser 2000 Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity The Secular Religious Impasse Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801863455 Jacobsohn Gary J 1994 Apple of Gold Constitutionalism in Israel and the United States Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691029535 Mazie Steven V 2006 Israel s Higher Law Religion and Liberal Democracy in the Jewish State Lexington Books ISBN 978 0739114858 The Existing Basic Laws Full Texts English the Knesset Israeli Parliament website official translations NOTE The 1968 Basic Law the Government translation is missing provisions probably amendments added later on As opposed to the 1968 and 2001 basic Law the Government translations the 1992 Basic Law the Government uses the term Acting PM to refer to an Interim Prime Minister as well The 2001 Law which is in effect present all provision in the translation however there are some lines missing It is recommended to use the Hebrew laws official publications in the Knesset website Jewish Law in the Debates of the Knesset HaMishpat HaIvri b Chakikat HaKneset edited by Prof Nahum Rakover 2 vols 1310 pp 159 190 External links editBasic Laws Knesset website Introduction and summaries Basic Laws Knesset website List with links to full texts The Constitution Knesset website 2007 Explains why there isn t a constitution Constitution for Israel Knesset website 2014 Project portal for the drafting of a constitution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basic Laws of Israel amp oldid 1220020628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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