Wednesday, January 14, 2009

the damage has already been done and Israeli democracy has been exposed in all its fear and panic

From Haaretz:

"
Democracy in a panic

Even if the Supreme Court overturns the unfortunate decision by the Central Elections Committee to disqualify United Arab List-Ta'al and Balad, enabling them to compete in next month's general election, the damage has already been done and Israeli democracy has been exposed in all its fear and panic. ( TRUE. A DISGRACE. )

That panic, which leads to a constant erosion of the concept of democracy and freedom of expression and completely negates the ability to include a minority with a propensity for going against the consensus, is rooted in two weak institutions: the Central Elections Committee and the Basic Law on the Knesset, Article 7A, Amendments 9 and 35, 1984-85, which specify the conditions under which a party or individual is banned from participating in Knesset elections.

No candidate or candidates' list shall participate in elections to the Knesset "if the goals or actions of the list or the actions of the person, expressly or by implication, include one of the following: (1) negation of the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish( COME ON ) and democratic state; (2) incitement to racism; (3) support for armed struggle by a hostile state or a terrorist organization against the State of Israel."

Anyone who abhors incitement to racism can, ostensibly, be happy with at least the second part of the amendment. But because the sponsors of the ban on the Arab parties are Avigdor Lieberman and his party, Yisrael Beiteinu, which supports moving Israel's Arab citizens and their communities to the other side of the border and making their civil rights conditional on proof of loyalty, and which enthusiastically supported former Kach leader Baruch Marzel and the head of the extremist World Headquarters to Save the People and Land of Israel (SOS Israel), Rabbi Shalom Dov Wolpe - it would have been better had that amendment never been passed.

Marzel was banned in 2002 by the election committee on the grounds of incitement to racism, a decision that was overturned by a wide margin by an 11-justice panel of the Supreme Court.

Nearly all of the justices with the minority opinion posited that his candidacy was more problematic than that of Azmi Bishara and Ahmed Tibi (the heads of Balad and United Arab List-Ta'al, respectively). Now Marzel is fulfilling the prophecy of former Supreme Court president Meir Shamgar, who in the Neiman Decision of 1984 (regarding the disqualification of the Progressive List for Peace and the Kach movement under Meir Kahane) allowed that democracy had the right to protect itself but expressed trepidation regarding the potential for abuse of that argument to antidemocratic ends.

There are no grounds for complaining about this to Marzel. Disqualifying Israeli Arab citizens from participating in public life is the essence of his worldview. It is the Kadima and Labor Knesset members who voted for the disqualification that spell the danger to democracy.

Their vote, which was influenced by considerations connected to the upcoming election in the shadow of the war, prove the justness of another section in the Neiman decision:

"It is not desirable to grant the authority for disqualifying a candidates' list according to considerations of content and essence to a body that is composed overwhelmingly, with the exception of the chairman, of representatives of political bodies whose considerations are likely to be ideological-political( VERY WISE )," Justice Menachem Elon wrote.

These are the roots of the evil: A faulty political mechanism and a faulty understanding of the concept of defensive democracy that dictated a vague and potentially dangerous amendment to the law. What is so threatening about a party that champions a model other than "Jewish-democractic" or that seeks to replace the concept of "independence" with the concept of "Nakba?" ( THE IDEA THAT ADVOCATING A US VERSION OF DEMOCRACY SHOULD NOT BE ALLOWED IS DISGRACEFUL )

Do they have the power to undermine the Jewishness of the Jews or the Israeliness, Zionism and the sovereignty of Israel?

In the name of defense, democracy has security services, the police and the courts, which are charged with preventing any activity, including treason and incitement, and with punishment leading to a ban from the political arena.

Those who fear the abuse of democracy would do well to make do with the 1984 Supreme Court decision ruling that the restrictions over the right to be elected should be imposed "only as an extreme last means of dealing with a clear and present danger." Any other means, including the slap in the face the Arabs received on Monday, destroys democracy rather than protecting it."

This was a political move. I cannot believe that some people in the US tried to justify it. They are essentially agreeing with the idea that, in Israel, if you want a secular state with no ethnic group having an advantage over any other, you cannot run for office. At all. Shame on them.

No comments: