Episode 69: Israel's great divide - An insider's look at the judicial reform, with Moshe Koppel
Ask Haviv Anything19 Joulu 2025

Episode 69: Israel's great divide - An insider's look at the judicial reform, with Moshe Koppel

Until October 7, Israel’s politics were consumed by the fight over the government’s judicial reform proposals. The issue drove hundreds of thousands of Israelis to the streets in protest. It triggered all the anxieties of right and left, to sharpen class and ethnic and cultural divides, to raise fears over minority rights and the future of Israeli democracy.


But in all those stormy months, there was very little in the way of serious and sober debate about Israeli institutions, checks and balances, judicial overreach and the dangers of an over-powerful executive. The substantive questions seemed to be pushed aside by the culture wars.


The judicial reform was to some degree frozen - or at least dramatically slowed - in March 2023 after massive strikes broke out throughout the country. The October 7 massacre and ensuing wars in Gaza, Lebanon and Iran relegated it to the bottom of the public agenda.


But it never actually went away. Fights between the government and the High Court and between the government and the attorney general have only worsened, bills now stand on the Knesset docket that seek to advance in piecemeal fashion different elements of the original reform.


To understand what happened - the original proposal, the great explosion of Israeli politics that ensued, and where it might all be headed - we turned to one of the architects of the original reform, Moshe Koppel, a professor emeritus of computer science and founder and chairman of the Kohelet Forum.


It was a long conversation, often contentious and deeply interesting. We hope you find it helpful.


This episode is sponsored by Iris Engelson and dedicated to the memory of her friend Sharon Kass (z”l) who passed away two years ago at the age of 57 on 29 Kislev, December 19.


According to her friends, Sharon was fiercely independent; unpretentious and unflappable; brilliant and deeply curious; at once confident and modest; wickedly funny; and absolutely devoted to her family, to her friends and colleagues, to the many young people she mentored, to the Jewish people, and to the Jewish state.


A cause particularly dear to Sharon’s heart was the International Birding and Research Center in Eilat, where she had volunteered. The bird sanctuary there is open to the public every day of the year with free admission.


May her memory be a blessing.


If you like what we do here, please join our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/c/AskHavivAnything. There you can ask the questions that guide the topics we cover on the podcast, join in our great discussions where listeners share news and valuable resources, and take part in our monthly livestreams where Haviv answers your questions live.


If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com⁠.


Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.

Jaksot(96)

Episode 75: Power, fear, and the survival of the Iranian regime, with Roya Hakakian

Episode 75: Power, fear, and the survival of the Iranian regime, with Roya Hakakian

Iran’s streets are in tumult. The latest protests are of a scale not seen before. New sections of Iranian society are in the streets — middle class merchants, the elderly and others. The protestors ha...

2 Tammi 52min

Episode 74: Why the global outrage at Israel's Somaliland recognition?

Episode 74: Why the global outrage at Israel's Somaliland recognition?

Welcome to our new short-form episodes interspersed with the regular interviews that dive into an often-asked question about Israel, Jews and the Middle East.Our current question: Why the global outra...

31 Joulu 202513min

Episode 73: Is military aid to Israel a good deal for America?

Episode 73: Is military aid to Israel a good deal for America?

Welcome to our new short-form episodes interspersed with the regular interviews that dive into an often-asked question about Israel, Jews and the Middle East.Our current question: Is military aid to I...

30 Joulu 20259min

Episode 72: The women fighters behind the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, with Elizabeth R. Hyman

Episode 72: The women fighters behind the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, with Elizabeth R. Hyman

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising stands as one of the few shining moments of (temporarily) successful Jewish resistance in the bottomless evil and despair that was the Holocaust. Heroes of the uprising like...

29 Joulu 20251h 2min

Episode 71: Why the heck does America support Israel?

Episode 71: Why the heck does America support Israel?

Welcome to our new short-form episodes interspersed with the regular interviews that dive into an often-asked question about Israel, Jews and the Middle East.Our current question: Why the heck does Am...

25 Joulu 202515min

Episode 70: The warrior Jews who terrified Rome, with Barry Strauss

Episode 70: The warrior Jews who terrified Rome, with Barry Strauss

Between the outbreak of the Jews’ Great Revolt against Rome in the year 66 CE and the final suppression of the Bar Kochba Revolt in 135, the Jews of the Roman Empire constituted the empire’s single bi...

23 Joulu 202552min

Episode 68: Antizionism is inherently violent, with Adam Louis-Klein

Episode 68: Antizionism is inherently violent, with Adam Louis-Klein

After the massacre at Bondi Beach, anthropologist Adam Louis-Klein returns to the podcast to help us make sense of the new Jew-hatred.Antizionism, Adam argues, may be a form of hatred of Jews, but it'...

17 Joulu 20251h 1min

Suosittua kategoriassa Historia

olipa-kerran-otsikko
gogin-ja-janin-maailmanhistoria
mayday-fi
huijarit
mystista
tsunami
totuus-vai-salaliitto
rss-ikiuni
konginkangas
rouva-diktaattori
rss-subjektiivinen-todistaja
rss-i-dont-like-mondays-2
sotaa-ja-historiaa-podi
rss-peter-peter
tiedetta-ja-sirkushuveja-vanhojen-aikojen-podcast
rss-kirkon-ihmeellisimmat-tarinat
rss-iltanuotiolla
maailmanpuu
romani-podcast
rss-sattuu-sita-suomessakin