Hundreds of thousands of Israeli stopped working on Monday to protest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s unprecedented plans to reform the countryâs judicial system, paralyzing the country.
This followed scenes of widespread unrest on Sunday night, after Netanyahu fired Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who became the first member of his Likud Party to speak out against the reforms. Gallant had warned that divisions over the plans threatened Israelâs security.
Netanyahu was due to deliver a speech to the nation Monday morning, Israeli media reported, but TV stations later said those plans had been suspended. It was not clear when or even if he would speak on Monday.
The plans proposed by Netanyahu’s hard-right coalition in January would threaten the independence of the Supreme Court and limit judgesâ powers, according to critics, and have faced stiff opposition with Israelis regularly taking to the streets to demonstrate.
Peter Lerner, head of international relations at Histadrut, the Israeli trade union umbrella group representing some 700,000 workers, tweeted a video of cheering activists. He said the groupâs chairman, Arnon Bar David, had just told the meeting: âWe are stopping the legal revolution.â
âThis is the time that together we bring Israel back to sanity and to the right path. This is the time that we together say âenoughâ and it doesnât matter if we are right or left,â Histadrut said in a statement.
Israel’s Airport Authority confirmed just before 11 a.m. local time (4 a.m. ET) that all departing flights from Ben-Gurion Airport would be grounded.
Big brands are taking part in the protest: McDonald’s said it would begin closing its restaurants across the country from midday (5 a.m. ET) before a full national closure from 2 p.m. (7 a.m. ET).
Israelâs leading universities will also be closed Monday in protest at the reforms and at Gallantâs firing.
âWe, the presidents and rectors of the research universities in Israel, express deep concern about the division and polarization in Israeli society and processes that could lead to a real damage to the national strength and stability of the State of Israel,â they said in a statement. Netanyahuâs planned reforms could lead to a âbrain drainâ in Israel and discourage international students, the statement added.
Overnight, tens of thousands protested in Tel Aviv, where demonstrators were sprayed with water canon. The cities Beersheba, Haifa and Jerusalem also saw unrest. At one point, crowds in Jerusalem gathered outside Netanyahu’s home and broke through a security cordon, Reuters reported.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog were among those calling for the reforms to be halted.
âThe entire nation is rapt with deep worry. Our security, economy, society â all are under threat,â Herzog said in a statement on Monday.
âFor the sake of the unity of the people of Israel, for the sake of the necessary responsibility, I call on you to halt the legislative process immediately.â
International pressure was also growing over Netanyahuâs reforms.
The White House released a statement from the National Security Council Sunday night that said the most recent protests âfurther underscore the urgent need for compromise.â
âAs the president recently discussed with Prime Minister Netanyahu, democratic values have always been, and must remain, a hallmark of the U.S.-Israel relationship,â it said.
Israel’s consul general in New York, Asaf Zamir, announced Sunday night he would resign after 18 months in the job, over the judicial reforms and and the defense minister’s firing.
âIt is now time for me to join the fight for Israelâs future to ensure it remains a beacon of democracy and freedom in the world,â he said.