
September 8, 2020
Why Israel Needs a Better Political Class
By Evelyn GordonIts twin coronavirus and budget crises are problems caused by—and only fixable by—political leaders, not bureaucratic maneuvering.
Israel’s current political crisis exemplifies the maxim that hard cases make bad law. This case is desperate. Six months after the coronavirus erupted and nine months after the fiscal year began, Israel still lacks both a functioning contact-tracing system and an approved 2020 budget, mainly because Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is more worried about politics than the domestic problems that Israel now confronts. The government’s failure to perform these basic tasks obviously invites the conclusion that civil servants’ far-reaching powers must not only be preserved, but perhaps even increased.
This would be the wrong conclusion. Bureaucrats, especially when they have great power, are vulnerable to the same ills as elected politicians. But unlike politicians, they are completely unaccountable to the public.
That doesn’t mean Haviv Rettig Gur is wrong to deem them indispensable. They provide institutional memory, flesh out elected officials’ policies, and supply information the politicians may not know and options they may not have considered. Yet the current crisis shows in several ways why they neither can nor should substitute for elected politicians.
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September 2020
Israel’s Civil Service May Be Necessary, but in a Democracy the Legislature Is Truly Indispensable
By Christopher DeMuthSeptember 2020
Israel’s Bureaucracy Isn’t Undemocratic, It’s Inept
By Reuven FrankenburgSeptember 2020
How Israel’s Ministers, and Not its Civil Servants, Made the Tough Decisions that Grew the Economy
By Yechiel LeiterSeptember 2020
Why Israel Needs a Better Political Class
By Evelyn GordonSeptember 2020
If Israel’s Politicians Shape up, the Bureaucracy Will Fall in Line
By Haviv Rettig Gur