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But the Knesset members from the coalition who opposed the legislation were being held hostage by the extremist elements in the coalition who were not interested in compromise, Gantz said. The National Unity leader added that passing the bill would harm cohesiveness in the IDF and thus damage Israel's national security.
The Knesset members from Israel's opposition camp will boycott the third reading and subsequent vote on the controversial repeal of the reasonableness standard, the leaders of the opposition parties announced after a meeting on Monday morning.
The announcement came just hours before the final voting for the bill was set to begin in the Knesset plenum, and while negotiating continued behind the scenes to attempt to reach some sort of compromise with the opposition for a watered-down version.
Earlier on Monday, President Isaac Herzog said in a statement, “We are in a state of national emergency. This is the moment for responsibility.
“We are working around the clock, in every possible way to find a solution. The infrastructure for a possible understanding exists, yet gaps remain that require the various parties to show responsibility.
“The citizens of Israel are thirsting for hope, and expect responsibility and leadership. During these decisive hours, I call on elected officials to act with courage, and to reach out in order to arrive at understanding,” Herzog said.
Tensions broke out in the Knesset plenum during the final arguments. Israeli-Arab MKs Mansour Abbas (Ra'am) engaged in a shouting match with Hadash-Ta'al MK Aida Touma Sliman, as Abbas criticized his counterpart for participating in bringing down the previous government and coalition, of which Ra'am was a part.
National Security Minister and Otzma Yehudit chairman MK Itamar Ben-Gvir said in a statement on Monday that the government "did not have a mandate to 'soften' the bill."
"The government of Israel is the body that leads the State of Israel – not [protest leader] Shikma Bressler or [former prime minister] Ehud Barak. The legislation should be passed as is," Ben-Gvir said.
The "reasonableness standard bill" is an amendment to Basic Law: The Judiciary, that would block Israel's courts from applying what is known as the "reasonableness standard" to decisions made by elected officials. The standard is a common law doctrine that allows for judicial review against government administrative decisions that are deemed beyond the scope of what a responsible and reasonable authority would undertake.
The bill's current wording bars use of the standard for decisions made by the prime minister, the cabinet as a whole, or any specific minister. It also bars its use against a minister's decision not to use his or her authority, and on ministers' appointments of government workers.
What compromises have been proposed?
According to compromise proposals put forward in the past week, the bill will be altered so that it will apply only to decisions made by the cabinet as a whole. This means that appointments or policy decisions made in the cabinet will be immune from application of the reasonableness standard but the standard will still apply regarding decisions made by individual ministers. If the decisions by individual ministers are on policy matters which are then ratified in the cabinet – they, too, will be exempt from the application of the reasonableness standard.
With regard to governmental appointments, the proposals were that appointments that require the Knesset's approval, such as appointments of ministers, will also be immune to the reasonableness standard, but appointments that do not require the Knesset's approval, such as director's general of government ministries or senior bureaucratic positions, will be subject to review via the reasonableness standard.
Finally, all of the changes above will not apply to decisions made during an interim government, i.e. from the moment an election is announced until a new government is formed.