Wednesday, May 27, 2015

GO FOR IT...MK SHAKED...GO FOR IT!!!

The Dangerous Ms. Shaked

By:   
Ayelet Shaked

                                                           Ayelet Shaked
“Who cares if she’s beautiful? Ayelet Shaked is dangerous,” was the title of a May 14, 2015 article in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, “The Daily Beast,” headlined another one as “The Scariest Politician in Israel.” “Foreign Policy magazine trying to be more subtle titled its article “Ayelet Shaked makes Benjamin Netanyahu look like a liberal. And now she’s the justice minister.”
In fact the 39 years old, in what the New York Times has called “the most contentious appointment in a much-criticized new government,” commented in an interview that “…the biggest shock of public life was the volume of the hatred,” she encountered.
Mrs. Shaked, who was elected to the Knesset in 2013, earned her reputation, as a “diligent and ambitious politician, who has strongly criticized the existing laws and legal establishment.”  Once a member of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Likud party, she changed affiliations because she felt that “every leader takes the Likud to the left.”
 “Wanting to belong to a party “to the right of Netanyahu, one that is based on the Bible and Jewish values, “ she helped in 2012, to plot Naftali Bennett’s coup to turn the old National-Religious Party into “the Jewish Home.”
 Recognized as the party polemicist she argues that democracy is a “form of government rather than a central component of the state.” She opposes decisions she considers not to be determined by the people but by the members of the judiciary.  “Those opposed to this blurring of powers,” she says, “and I am of course included, are being defined as ‘the sons of darkness,’ while those who support depriving the right of the public to make decisions through their Knesset representatives are called ‘sons of light.'”
In her commitment “to strengthen the Jewish identity” of Israel, “to have a democratic, Jewish, strong state,” she comes to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s government with a large agenda:
  • Curtailing the power of the Supreme Court,
  • Giving politicians more sway over judicial appointments
  • Ousting Eritrean and Sudanese asylum-seekers.
  • Reestablishment of a department in charge of Jewish identity in the schools.
  • Push a “nationality bill” that would enshrine Israel as a legally Jewish state.
  • Limiting the foreign funding of advocacy groups
  • Annexation of some of the disputed West Bank lands.
Moshe Negbi, the legal analyst at Israel Radio explained the challenges Mrs. Shaked faces: “Many people think, and Ayelet Shaked also in good faith thinks, that because she was chosen by the majority, the courts need to obey her.” “What she doesn’t understand is that democracy also fights against the tyranny of the majority, which is only possible with a judicial system and an attorney general which are independent.”
In fact Mrs. Shaked position regarding the Supreme Court, for instance, are not new: Professor Daniel Friedman, who attended Harvard Law School and was Israel’s justice minister from 2007 to 2009, shared many of Mrs. Shaked’s views regarding the justice system, yet the judicial selection process hasn’t changed much. Besides, professor Friedman had the support of the prime minister something Mrs. Shaked probably doesn’t have.
Mrs. Shaked who never thought she would be appointed Justice Minister, got the part of a desperate last-minute deal that saved Mr. Netanyahu from not meeting the deadline to form his new government.
According to Mazal Mualem, the former senior political correspondent for the Maariv and Haaretz newspapers, “Netanyahu never imagined being forced to hand Shaked the Justice Ministry.” In fact Mrs. Mualem says that Ayelet Shaked’s appointment is so hard for Netanyahu that he could not hide his disdain, completely ignoring her after the swearing ceremony not even deigning to shake her hand, all in front of the cameras.
 In an article headlined “There is very little Shaked can do in the Justice Ministry,” Nahum Barnea- voted one of the most influential journalists in Israel- points out that Mrs. Shaked needs the support of Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon who in his agreement to form part of the Prime Minister’s coalition, has a veto right. Then she will have to discuss her proposals with the attorney general, who expressed his reservations in the past over three bills she favored; and finally, she will have to make sure that she has a majority in the Knesset. In a 61-member coalition, says Mrs. Barnea, “that’s not an easy task.”
No new judges to the Supreme Court will be selected until 2017. “Even if Shaked survives in the Justice Ministry until then, she will have to get a majority to support her candidate,” says Mr. Barnea.  The Prime Minister and Supreme Court president have more power in selecting the attorney general than the Justice Minister.  In view of the fact that her ideas and their implementation have as much chances as the opposing views and activism, why is Ayelet Shaked considered so “dangerous,” after all?
 Zehava Galon the head of the left wing Meretz party described Mrs. Shaked in a Facebook post as an “intelligent and hard-working politician with nationalist anti-democratic views.” Others that oppose her have equally described her as “strategic and focused and grounded in what she believes.”  Maybe that’s where her “danger” inheres. Mrs. Shaked belongs to a new crop of dedicated and believing politicians that are positioning themselves to change the political guard in Israel.
Democracy is served when all ideas compete with each other, producing unintended consensus. Unanimity of ideas seldom serves a society well.
Mrs. Shaked is dangerous only for those for whom respecting opposing ideas is not part of their understanding of what democracy entitles.
About the Author: Moshe Pitchon is a Jewish thinker living in Florida. His weekly contemporary TaNaKh commentaries appear in Spanish, French and Portuguese

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Ayelet Shaked

                                                            Ayelet Shaked
Ayelet Shaked, member of the HaBayit HaYehudi (The Jewish Home) Party, has been appointed Justice Minister by Prime Minister Netanyahu. She is a former Knesset member, where her reputation is stellar despite just being there for two years.
Why? During her Knesset membership, Ms. Shaked pushed for passage of an amendment that would limit the – in her words – “leftist” High Court of Justice’s power, while supporting the “Jewish State Law,” deemed controversial by the very same “leftists.” The Jewish State Law would legalize Israel’s status as a Jewish state! She also supported another controversial measure: a ban on public transportation during Shabbat. On the other hand, she played a key role in passing a law ending military service exemptions for haredim. “The Left does not like her because too often she speaks her mind and tells the truth. To the Left, this is a flaw,” says Jack Engelhard, a prominent writer.
Who is Ayelet Shaked, this devoted Jew and Zionist? The 39-year-old brunette beauty (she was named the best-looking female in the Knesset) is a mother of two young children and the wife of a fighter pilot. Judging by her politics and spiritual inclination, you would think she is part of a Modern Orthodox community. However, Ayelet Ben Shaul Shaked grew up in a totally secular home in north Tel Aviv, the daughter of a politically left-wing Ashkenazi mother and a Likud-voting Iraqi father. She has said that she’s been right-wing ever since she was a child. Her politics became firmly formulated during her military service, when she made friends with many religious nationalists.
She’s seen as a poster child for The Jewish Home’s efforts to reach beyond its Orthodox base. She has also been helpful in the settler movement’s effort to overcome stereotypes of settlers and their supporters as being “religious, gun-toting fanatics.”
At Tel Aviv University she obtained a BSc in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and began her career in the Tel Aviv hi-tech industry, working as a software engineer at Texas Instruments and later moving on to become manager of its marketing department.
During her army service, Ayelet Ben Shaul served as an instructor in the Israel Defense Forces’ elite Golani Brigade. (By the way, in 2012, she was included in the Globes list of the 50 most influential women.)
Then, wife, mother, military-instructor, computer-engineer Ayelet Shaked entered politics. What party appealed to the highly intelligent secular young woman? The Jewish Home, what else?  The Jewish Home’s fierce right-wing Zionism combined with passionate Judaism drew her to it.
After working as Netanyahu’s office director for two years, Ayelet Shaked ran for the Knesset with The Jewish Home, with stunning results.
And now she is Israel’s new Minister of Justice. I pray that the G-d of Israel protect her from the numerous death-threats issued against her by her and by Israel’s enemies.

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