Legalizing politics and politicizing the law

There’s a straight line connecting leftists’ rejection of the settlements’ legality with rightists’ rejection of the indictments against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

By Evelyn Gordon, jns

One of the modern era’s most dangerous problems is the conflation of politics with law. Political questions are increasingly treated as legal ones, which inevitably results in the law becoming politicized. Last week provided two salient examples.

One was the response to the U.S. State Department’s announcement that Israeli settlements don’t violate international law. What was striking was that many opponents didn’t actually challenge the department’s (correct) legal conclusions. Instead, they objected on policy grounds.

Democratic presidential candidate and former vice president Joe Biden, for instance, complained, “This decision harms the cause of diplomacy, takes us further away from the hope of a two-state solution, and will only further inflame tensions in the region.” Another leading Democratic candidate, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, termed the announcement “a significant step backward in our efforts to achieve a two-state solution.”

Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism, was particularly blatant. While acknowledging that the decision focused solely on international law, he worried that it “will be widely read as a broader change to the U.S. position on Israeli settlements,” which “would place serious and critical obstacles to a viable two-state solution.” Consequently, he urged the administration “to reverse its position.”

Essentially, all three want the settlements declared illegal simply because they think settlements are bad policy, regardless of what international law actually says. In other words, they’re incapable of distinguishing policy from law.

People who understand this difference have no problem with settlements being recognized as legal because they understand that something can be bad policy even if it’s legal. Indeed, that’s precisely what all administrations, both Republican and Democratic, did for roughly three decades between Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama: They vehemently opposed settlements on policy grounds while simultaneously acknowledging that they weren’t illegal.

Yet the concept of “it’s legal, but it stinks” has evidently gone out of style, especially on the left. When leftists think something stinks, they want it declared illegal, even if it’s not.

The advantages of this tactic are obvious. Policy questions, by definition, are disputable; indeed, many people disagree that settlements are bad policy. But law ostensibly eliminates controversy because once the courts rule something illegal, then everyone is supposed to accept that it must stop. Thus branding any policy one opposes as illegal is meant to make it politically illegitimate. If settlements are illegal, they mustn’t be built, even if they’re actually good policy.

Granted, this ploy has an inherent problem when it comes to international law since there are no recognized courts whose authority to make such judgments is universally accepted. Neither America nor Israel, for instance, ever agreed to accept the legal interpretations of the International Criminal Court, U.N. agencies or any other such body. And without an accepted arbiter, whether or not something violates international law is endlessly debatable.

But the bigger problem is this tactic’s enormous cost, which far outweighs any possible benefit: When people start branding anything they object to as “illegal,” they turn the law into just another player on the political battlefield. And once that happens, legal decisions will be treated with no more respect than any other political pronouncement.

Thus Americans who object to recognizing the settlements’ legality on policy grounds are destroying any pretensions that international law might have to objectivity and impartiality, just as the European Union did by insisting that international law requires labeling products from Israeli settlements, but not from Turkish settlements in northern Cyprus or Moroccan settlements in Western Sahara. In both cases, international law is being treated not as an objective, universally applied standard, but as a selective political tool to punish disfavored countries or policies. And as such, it deserves no more deference than any other political decision.

Given how amorphous international law actually is, that may be no great loss. But when the same tactics are applied to domestic legal systems, the consequences become devastating. Once a significant portion of the citizenry starts to view legal decisions as politics in another guise, the consensus on which democracy’s survival depends—that legal decisions must be honored—will rapidly erode.

As I’ve noted before, this is already happening in Israel. But last week’s indictment of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu provides a particularly worrying example of the costs.

I’m the rare Netanyahu supporter who thinks that one of the three cases against him is actually serious. But for two understandable reasons, many supporters believe that he’s simply being persecuted by a leftist legal establishment frustrated by repeated failures to oust him through democratic elections.

The first is that the Attorney General’s Office and the courts have intervened in literally thousands of policy decisions over the past three decades, frequently in defiance of actual written law and almost always in the left’s favor. In short, both bodies have routinely behaved like political activists rather than impartial jurists. So rightists have no reason to trust their impartiality now.

Second, Netanyahu has been targeted by frivolous investigations—including, in my view, two of the three now going to trial—ever since he first became prime minister in 1996. All involved genuinely repulsive conduct on Netanyahu’s part. But rather than treating such conduct as a problem on which the public, rather than the courts, must render judgment, the legal establishment repeatedly opened cases against him, to which they devoted countless man-hours before finally closing them.

Now, the legal establishment says it has finally found a real crime. But like the boy who cried wolf, Netanyahu’s supporters no longer believe it.

The combination of these two factors means that many Israelis genuinely feel that their prime minister has been ousted by a corrupt legal establishment solely because it opposes his policies. And that will inevitably foster even greater distrust of the legal system.

Leftists spend a lot of time these days fretting about democracy’s possible collapse. But if they really want to avert such a collapse, the first step is to stop politicizing the law, so that legal institutions can regain public trust. For without a legal system whose decisions are widely respected, democracies will be left with no way of resolving disputes but the one shared by dictatorships and anarchies—plain old-fashioned brute force.

This article was originally syndicated by JNS.org (www.jns.org) on November 27, 2019. © 2019 JNS.org

December 5, 2019 | 2 Comments »

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  1. What Evelyn Gordon’s article boils down to is the conclusion that law is politics carried on by other means. She refers to the objectivity of international law. No body of law was, is or will be objective and completely rational because men and women deliver judgements. And they are neither completely rational nor objective. What then to do? In Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand, parliament can remove the judges from office, but it’s a difficult procedure. Perhaps more to the point is the comment attributed to former President Andrew Jackson as he reacted to a decision of the then US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall; to wit, ‘John Marshall has made his decision, now let him try to enforce it’. Not a desirable attitude, but perhaps one that is necessary in the present circumstances.

  2. From Ynetnews. Dror Ben-Yamini.

    Blue and White’s Bibi trap
    Opinion: The centrist party’s rush to defend the judiciary’s side over the indictment of Benjamin Netanyahu, while ignoring the justly earned public criticism, could drive their moderate right-wing voters away
    Ben-Dror Yemini |
    Updated: 12.05.19 , 00:26

    Like many of my fellow colleagues, yours truly is being asked about five times a day what’s going to happen next in the world of Israeli politics. Not only don’t I have a clue, I always say, but none of my peers seem to either.
    Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter
    We journalists are also trying to understand what’s going on behind the scenes, but apparently, we simply don’t know.
    ????? ???? ?? ???? ???
    L-R: Blue and White leadership Gabi Ashkenazi, Mishe Ya’alon, Yair Lapid and Benny Gantz (Photo: Amit Shabi)
    Every small maneuver – like canvassing recommendations from MKs or a new statement from Yisrael Beytenu Chairman Avigdor Liberman’s brain – makes the headlines – even when they are grandiose in comparison to their true importance or influence.
    If one may offer an assessment (not a prophecy!), Blue and White is making one of its biggest mistakes at the moment and is playing right into the hands of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
    It should seem that Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit’s decision to indict Netanyahu would be a great political asset to the heads of that party, but it seems like what has happened over the last 10 days proves the complete opposite to be true.
    ????? ????? ??? ?????? ??????
    Supporters of Benjamin Netanyahu protest against his indictment at a rally in Tel Aviv (Photo: Moti Kimchi)
    The controversy over Netanyahu serves Netanyahu and Netanyahu only. He is not a victim, this is all a charade, but while many can sense it, there are others, who are not part of the prime minister’s usual base, right into his corner.
    There are so many pressing issues on Israel’s agenda – from Gaza to the collapsing health system, from West Bank annexation to Iran.
    The real argument should have been between a right-wing, religious Netanyahu-Litzman-Smotrich government, whose effect on Israel’s long-term national interests would be calamitous, and a centrist government, i.e. a unity government, that could serve the national interests much better.
    Meanwhile, Netanyahu’s legal fate overshadows it all. The judicial elite is considered to be the executive authority of Netanyahu’s opponents, but it’s not entirely far-fetched.
    In any case, figures such as former Supreme Court chief justice Aharon Barak and State Prosecutor Shai Nitzan – who have both allegedly taken on governmental powers that no one granted them – have rightly earned the judiciary this criticism.
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    State Prosecutor Shai Nitzan (Photo: Ohad Zwigenberg)
    The moderate right-wing electorate, who doesn’t want to see a Litzman-Smotrich government happen, feel more sympathetic towards Netanyahu rather than Nitzan and Barak.
    This is where Blue and White make their biggest mistake – they completely identify with the “law enforcement authorities.”
    They don’t make a peep about the criticism. They are excited over the indictment like a child with a new toy and they struggle to understand that this toy is poisoned, bringing more harm than benefit.
    To add insult to injury, there are those on the left who are trying to put pressure on Mandelblit to make a decision that would prevent a person under criminal indictment from forming a government.
    The law explicitly says that a prime minister must only step down after a court ruling, but this does not interest them.
    They try, as is their way, to make trumped up interpretations that reach their desired political outcome. What foolishness. This exactly proves Netanyahu’s claim that the judicial system conspired to attempt a coup.
    Well, he is wrong – there are political diversions and incentives, but there is no collusion, and there’s certainly no systematic decision – but they insist on proving him right.
    ????? ????? ???? ?????
    Benjamin Netanyahu, right, with Yaakov Litzman of United Torah Judaism, right, and Aryeh Deri of Shas (Photo: Alex Kolomoisky)
    One can assume, and mostly hope, that the judges and the attorney general in Jerusalem will not get dragged into this provocation, with the juristic oligarchy putting pressure on them to make a decision that would trample the written law.
    If that happens, God forbid, I will also go out to protest the judicial system, although I wish for true national government and not an extremist ultra-Orthodox-far-right one.
    The public who voted for this political stalemate in the last election is essentially moderate right, and done with the current government’s radicalization has decided to move to the center.
    Blue and White has managed to present itself as a sane national Zionist alternative – it consists of both moderate left and moderate right, which is not a disadvantage under the current circumstances.

    Apparently, even some leftists are becoming uncomfortable with the prosecutors’ and Supreme Court’s illegal usurpation of power.