High Court remains the elite stronghold
Dorit Beinish won again and taught a number of politicians a thing or two. The four representatives of the right were able to appoint only one judge, while Beinish could appoint three. Eli Zalmanovitch in an op -ed about the High Court rule which threatens us all.
Eliyahu Zelmanowitz, Beitar Ilit
Two of the judges appointed to the Supreme Court - Judge Noam Solberg and Professor Daphne Barak Erez - are the focus of attention lately. Judge Solberg is identified as a rightist, because he resides in Alon Shvut in Gush Etzion.
Dorit Beinish won again, and taught a number of politicians a thing or two. The four representatives of the right were able to appoint only one judge, while Beinish could appoint three.
In addition, Judge Noam Solberg is appropriate, by any standard. Solberg does wear a yarmulke, but he certainly considered a ′religious pet′ of sorts. He is also an excellent jurist and a judge worthy of the post. Solberg′s place in the Supreme Court seems as a natural in an acceptable compromise to the appointment of judges to the Supreme Court.The problem Beinish faced was not whether Solberg will be appointed, but the price that may be charged for the appointment and how to raise the value.
The ′Goat Trick′
Beinish, as a shrewd politician, knew that she could do the ′goat trick′ on them ", then remove it and find that all is well.
For Beinish, the "goat" was the management of a huge distraction battle designed to appeal to the Supreme Court about Solberg′s appointment. To this end, the Haaretz newspaper - the Supreme Court′s "home newspaper," and the committee representative lawyer Ben - Ari, a staunch Beinish supporter, gave an unprecedented sharp -tongued .interview in which she attacked the appointment
Obviously, Solberg′s appointment, like his predecessor Judge Eliakim Rubinstein′s appointment, does not make up for the appointment of the three Beinish candidates to this lofty position
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