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Politics11:33 · 12m ago

Israeli Democracy Undermined as Bureaucrats Override Elected Officials

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

The fundamental principle of democracy is that the public elects representatives who make decisions, while professional bureaucrats advise and implement those decisions. When bureaucrats become the decisive force, governance suffers and voters lose the ability to hold their elected officials accountable. This issue is illustrated by a historical example from 1862 during the American Civil War, when President Abraham Lincoln dismissed General George McClellan for refusing to act despite being a military expert. Lincoln emphasized that professionals are advisors, but elected leaders hold decision-making power.

In contemporary Israel, this principle appears inverted, with bureaucrats and generals increasingly overriding elected officials. This undermines the democratic process because voters elect politicians, not civil servants or legal advisors, to decide policy. When bureaucrats block or delay ministerial initiatives, the public cannot properly evaluate their representatives’ performance at the ballot box. This dynamic stalls reforms and wastes government resources on internal battles rather than effective governance.

The article argues that the solution requires restoring clear authority to elected ministers, including enabling them to dismiss senior bureaucrats who refuse to implement government policy. It also calls for greater public engagement in parliamentary committees and possibly street protests to defend democratic choice. A recent positive sign is the Shin Bet chief David Zini’s public affirmation that the security services are subordinate to the government, signaling some shift toward respecting elected authority.

Ultimately, Israel must reclaim control from entrenched bureaucracies to ensure the government reflects the will of the people. The state belongs to its citizens, and if bureaucrats do not serve the voters’ mandate, the public must demand their accountability and regain the reins of power.

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
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