1. Introduction
The article raises the issue of whether a ‘constitutional moment’ has arisen amidst attempts at illiberal constitutionalisation and an existing illiberal constitutional system. Israel is used as a case study for the first scenario, and Hungary for the second. In Israel, in early 2023, the new government of Benjamin Netanyahu, supported by far-right nationalist and ultra-Orthodox parties, initiated judicial reform with the aim of dismantling the separation of powers and establishing an unbound executive. This raises the question of whether, 75 years after its establishment, the moment has finally arrived to enact a written constitution in the State of Israel. The current political and constitutional system in Hungary was introduced with the adoption of the Fundamental Law, the new constitution of Viktor Orbán's illiberal regime, and there are hardly any signs of the return of liberal democratic constitutionalism by either amending or replacing the current constitution.
‘Constitutional moments’ are points in history when constitutional changes are fostered by a particular mobilisation and engagement of the demos, representing a transformative expression of popular sovereignty in a conscious consent of the majority of ordinary citizens.Footnote 1 Constitutional crisis or a failure in the constitution-making process sometimes stands behind the constitutional change triggered by the constitutional moment.Footnote 2
The question I wish to answer here is whether the current constitutional situations in Israel and Hungary can be considered to be a constitutional moment, which necessitates popular mobilisation led by the political and professional elite, such as constitutional scholars.
2. Israel: Towards authoritarianism?
The State of Israel came into being on 14 May 1948, by way of the 1948 Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel. It is primarily a political document, which aimed to distinguish between legislative and constitutive powers by creating a Provisional State Council and a Constituent Assembly. There were then, and still are several arguments against the enactment of a written constitution.Footnote 3 One of the fiercest opponents of the project of drafting a constitution was David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first Prime Minister. A major obstruction in adopting a constitution comes from orthodox and secularist circles taking a decisive position on the unresolved questions of the relationship between religion and state, and the national and cultural or religious nature of the declared Jewishness of the state. In other words, the main cause of uncertainty was the profound ideological rift in Israeli society between the secular and the religious vision of the state. There were other reasons: (i) Ben-Gurion wanted the least restrictions on his power; (ii) the majority of Jews were living abroad and it seemed unfair to entrench a constitution by a minority; (iii) the British experience was also an argument against adopting a constitution; and (iv) the religious population objected because for them there was already a constitution – the Bible. As both the secular and religious parties opposed the constitution for different reasons, and despite the large majority of the secular camp (only 16 out of the 120 members represented the religious parties), in June 1950 the Knesset decided not to draft a constitution in a single document. Following a heated debate on the religious and secular vision of Israel as a Jewish state, a compromise resolution was passed, named after its sponsor, Haim Harrari, Chair of the Knesset Committee: the Basic Laws, together, would form the state constitution.Footnote 4
In contrast to the relative ease with which the first nine Basic Laws were passed after 1958 – which related mainly to institutional considerations, and were in essence the legal formalisation of the existing structure of government – the religious parties objected to the draft of the Basic Law on Human and Civil Rights, proposed in 1989, because they claimed it would undermine the religious status quo. The religious laws are one of the reasons why the Basic Law on Human Dignity contains an explicit provision (Article 10) which protects the validity of laws enacted before its coming into force. Indeed, the new Basic Laws of the early 1990s, which changed the previous constitutional culture of legislative sovereignty following the British constitutional tradition,Footnote 5 made it possible to challenge in court some basic tenets of the status quo expressed in post-1992 legislation or administrative regulation. It also allowed a reinterpretation of pre-existing legislation, including that relating to the religious status quo in a manner compatible with the Basic Laws. The activist stand of the Supreme Court of Israel made maintaining the status quo in many religious-related issues impossible; however, the growing involvement of the Supreme Court in such issues should be assessed within the context of the intensifying activities of the Likud-led legislature and government in shifting the balance of the status quo in responding to demands of the religious parties.Footnote 6 According to the perception of influential commentators such as Menachem Mautner, the highly activist doctrine of the Israeli Supreme Court adopted in the 1980s was a consequence of (i) the decline of the political, social and cultural hegemony of the Labour movement and the renewal of religious fundamentalism in the second half of the 1970s, and (ii) the Likud victory in the 1977 elections, which brought about a radical change in the collective identity of the state.Footnote 7 Michael Walzer calls this development the ‘paradox’ of secular liberation movements being taken over by religious forces.Footnote 8 The crisis of Jewish secularity, modernity and liberalism of the previous three decades caused the rise of religious fundamentalism within religious Zionist groups, and especially within ultra-Orthodoxy.
Even the most symbolic expression of the state's new identity – the two Basic Laws of 1992 on Human Dignity and Liberty and on Freedom of Occupation, respectively declaring the State of Israel as a ‘Jewish and democratic state’ – has received alternative interpretations. Courts and scholars are divided over whether the term ‘Jewish’ should be read as referring to Judaism as a religion, to Jewish nationality, or to Jewish culture. The majority of views are that this ‘constitutional’ provision does not mandate the state to become a theocracy because it is certainly excluded by the democratic character, but rather mandates it to ‘integrate’ or ‘harmonise’ the two poles. This phrase leaves ample room for competing interpretations.Footnote 9
During these radical changes in party politics, the Supreme Court of Israel embarked on a very activist jurisprudence in order to defend the secular liberal values of the pre-1977 period. While the Likud, on the one hand, has indeed eroded the religious status quo, on the other hand, the party defined itself as national-liberal; for instance, PM Begin was a strong supporter of constitutional basic rights. The Basic Laws of 1992 were in fact supported by the Likud government of the time and by most Likud MKs. As a result of Supreme Court activism – especially in its capacity as the High Court of Israel handling citizens’ petitions without concrete personal interest against administrative authorities – Justice Aharon Barak, Chief Justice of the Court for 12 years and the person most closely identified with its judicial activism, represented the view that any court of law should have competence to legally review any legal norm that regulates human conduct. Although, in theory, the courts could review any law, institutional considerations on some issues – for instance, whether to go to war or build settlements in the Occupied Territories – led them to refrain from doing so. Barak, who referred to the enactment of the two Basic Laws on human rights as a ‘constitutional revolution’, provided the following interpretation of section 2 of the Basic Law on Freedom of Occupation on ‘Israel as a Jewish and Democratic State’: ‘The meaning of the Jewish nature of the state is not in the religious-Halachic sense, … and hence the values of the State of Israel as a Jewish State should not be identified with the Jewish Law’.Footnote 10 Barak proposed two concepts as defining the ‘Jewish state’: (i) a ‘national concept’ of the State of Israel as a ‘national home to the Jewish people’, and (ii) as values derived from the Halakha (which, in Barak's interpretation, intends to prevent the direct application of the Halakha as part of Israeli law). In other words, Barak suggested that a national secular concept should dominate a strictly religious one. In Barak's view the ‘Jewish state’ and ‘democratic state’ concept should be approached on equal terms at peace with each other, without raising any contradictions:Footnote 11
An appropriate analysis does not have to intensify these contradictions. On the contrary, a purposeful analysis, based on constitutional unity and normative harmony, aspires to find that which is unifying and common, while preventing contradictions and reducing points of friction. We must strive to find the common denominator and synthesis between the values of Israel as a Jewish state and the values of Israel as a democratic state.
Barak also emphasises the fact that most of the population of Israel is secular and that some of its citizens are not Jewish. With regard to the democratic character of the state, Barak indicates that it establishes provisions for both majority rule and the preservation of human rights:Footnote 12
The values of the state of Israel are the same values that are being reflected on a given time the premise of modern democracy. This democracy is based mainly on two foundations: the first is the government of the people. A democratic regime is one where the people determine their destiny. The people choose their representatives and the latter determine the result on a majority vote. The second foundation is human rights. A democratic regime is one that holds and develops human rights. Only the combination of both tiers can lead to a true democracy.
Once one of these tiers is removed from the equation, it is analogous to losing its essence.Footnote 13
By way of reaction to the Supreme Court's activism, there were constant efforts by Jewish nationalists to propose a new Basic Law, which defines Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people to restore the balance between the country's Jewish and democratic values, allegedly upset in favour of the latter. This law, which was finally enacted in 2018,Footnote 14 prevents Israel from becoming a binational state. The most recent institutional reaction to the ‘constitutional revolution’ is the judicial reform attempt of the current far-right governing coalition led by Benjamin Netanyahu to dismantle the independence of the Supreme Court. The amendment to the Basic Law on the Judiciary has the following main objectives:
(a) to introduce a government majority in the judicial appointments committee;
(b) to require 80 per cent or more of all Supreme Court justices to strike down unconstitutional primary legislation;
(c) to determine that a decision regarding the judicial review of a statute will not serve as a precedent regarding any other statute;
(d) to override the Court's rulings by a majority decision of the parliament;
(e) to prohibit judicial review of Basic Laws;
(f) to prohibit the review of administrative action based on the reasonableness doctrine.Footnote 15
The reform package met huge opposition also beyond the Knesset. Weekly street demonstrations on Saturday nights, involving hundreds of thousands of people, took place from mid-January 2023 in cities throughout the country. They were coordinated by a web of non-partisan civil society organisations, student protesters, LGBT groups, members of the ‘Anti-Occupation Bloc’ made up of organisations supporting Palestinian rights.Footnote 16 Different parts of society opposed the legislation by writing letters, petitions and memorandums.Footnote 17 Hundreds of Israeli, as well as senior foreign economists warned of the financial implications of the planned legislation.Footnote 18 Leaders of the very successful Israeli tech industry signed a letter stating that the changes would distance international investors from Israel,Footnote 19 and Israeli companies announced that they will move their money out of the country.Footnote 20 Maybe the most influential opposition came from the military: more than a thousand Air Force officers protested and announced that they would not attend regular training sessions.Footnote 21
Representatives of the legal profession have been particularly active: former Israeli attorney generals and state attorneys, as well as retired judges, have protested against the plan.Footnote 22 Legal scholars have been among the most organised. The newly established Israeli Law Professors’ Forum for Democracy issued a public statementFootnote 23 and several position papers criticising various elements of the proposed judicial overhaul.Footnote 24 Several dozens of constitutional law professors engaged in popular education about the importance of liberal constitutional democracy.Footnote 25 Israeli constitutional law professor Yaniv Roznai expressed his conviction that with the public engagement in constitutional matters, Israel has reached a constitutional moment.Footnote 26
3. Hungary: Semi-electoral autocracy
After the democratic transitions of 1989–90 in Eastern and Central Europe, Bruce Ackerman extended his theory of constitutional moment to the constitutional transformations in the region. Ackerman also warned that the time window for the adoption of a new liberal democratic constitution is not open forever: ‘the constitutional guarantees of a liberal rule of law state can be established only if a new constitution is adopted, and the possibility to adopt a new basic law fades as the time passes’.Footnote 27 According to Ackerman, there would have been a possibility, and indeed a need, for the adoption of a new constitution in Hungary at the beginning of the political transition, which would have resolved the legitimacy deficit of the ‘system change’, similar to what was done with respect to the German Basic Law (Grundgesetz) of 1949. In an interview given a decade later he observes regrettably that Hungary missed the opportunity for its constitutional moment.Footnote 28 Contrary to Ackerman's view, András Sajó argues that there has been no constitutional moment in Hungary, either in 1989 or later during the 1990s, because there was no ‘constitutional enthusiasm’ by the people.Footnote 29
Indeed, the Hungarian democratic transition process was rather an elitist project. In October 1989, the undemocratically elected, illegitimate legislature formally enacted the comprehensive modifications of the 1949 Constitution, after peaceful negotiations between representatives of the Communist regime and its democratic opposition. This process in the literature is referred to as ‘post-sovereign’ or ‘pacted constitution-making’.Footnote 30 The public engagement for the adoption of a new constitution was also lacking in the summer of 1996, when a draft constitution prepared by the then governing parties, together with the support of some opposition parties, did not obtain the necessary two-thirds majority of the votes in the parliament, because part of the main governing party (MSZP) did not support it.
A new Constitution, called the Fundamental Law, was finally adopted in 2011.Footnote 31 This occurred after the current governing Fidesz Party's 2010 electoral victory with the exclusive votes of Fidesz without any public, professional or even parliamentary consultation. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's intention with this ‘illiberal’ constitution was to eliminate any notion of checks and balances, and even the parliamentary rotation of governing parties, as well as the institutional guarantees of fundamental rights, by dismantling the independence of the Constitutional Court and the ordinary judiciary.Footnote 32 By now, Hungary had turned into an autocracy. Both Freedom House and the Varieties of Democracy Project have tracked the country as it passed from a ‘consolidated’ democracy (Freedom House in 2010) through the ‘partially consolidated’ category (Freedom House in 2015), and into the status of ‘electoral autocracy’Footnote 33 and ‘hybrid regime’.Footnote 34 In a country that is no longer a constitutional democracy able to ensure a peaceful rotation of power, and where there is no free media, no academic freedom and no independent civil society, there is very limited possibility and point of resistance, in general, and of a scholarly nature, in particular.
During the last 14 years the only exception was a scholarly debate before the 2022 parliamentary elections, following the unification of all opposition parties in a joint list against Fidesz. The subject of this scholarly discussion was how to escape from the trap of the ‘illiberal’ Fundamental Law if the opposition wins the election, but without the two-thirds majority that is required to replace it. It was clear that even if Fidesz were to lose the national election and a new government formed, the latter would not be able to function, whether in the legal, economic or cultural domains. On the foundation of the Fundamental Law a great deal of power would remain in the hands of its incumbent holders or those near to them. The new government would not be able to govern in practice; all or most of its measures could be sabotaged by state officials, among them constitutional judges who cannot be removed or replaced under the Fundamental Law during the next parliamentary term. If, therefore, a democratically elected government would wish to replace the autocratic system, institutionalised by the Fidesz government, with a constitutional system, it must free itself from the Fundamental Law.Footnote 35
Ultimately, at the parliamentary election on 3 April 2022, the Fidesz victory against the united opposition was the largest ever since 2010, gaining again the two-thirds majority of the seats. There can be various explanations for this landslide victory. Kim Scheppele blamed the rigged election rules, the terrible war in Ukraine, which the government also used for its own benefit, and some demonstrated instances of incumbent cheating.Footnote 36 Andrew Arato, on the other hand, saw two other reasons that decided the election. The first of these is the opposition's ‘combination of the promise of the restoration of the rule of law at the price of illegality’, meaning circumventing the two-thirds majority requirement in the Fundamental Law. In a contribution to this scholarly discussion, authored together with Arato, I also criticised some of these ideas, such as the immediate change in Fidesz's Fundamental Law, or even the speedy enactment of a new constitution with a simple, instead of a two-thirds majority in the event of an opposition victory.Footnote 37 However, following the election, Arato also criticised the publicising of the constitutional change carried out illegally as ‘rendszerváltás’ (regime change) ‘rather than replacement of a not very popular government’,Footnote 38 which allowed Orbán to claim that a coup was being planned. This argument indicates that changing the autocratic regime back to a democratic regime was an unpopular cause for most of the voters – or, at least, that they did not care about liberal democratic constitutionalism. Adopting Bruce Ackerman's theory, this means that there was no constitutional moment before the election.
The increased support for Fidesz by the majority of voters who cast votes on 3 April 2022, despite Orbán's immoral stance towards Putin's war, as well as these voters’ ‘little appreciation for freedom and almost none for limiting power’,Footnote 39 raises the question of who is to blame for the success of Viktor Orbán and his Fidesz party, besides themselves and the people who voted for them. Kim Scheppele argues that politics has failed ‘the people’, who were only choosing an option that they were offered, and not the other way around.Footnote 40 In other words, blaming exclusively the people cannot help in understanding the crisis of democracy.Footnote 41 Furthermore, Jan-Werner Müller criticises the convenient but ultimately very misleading response to the decline of democracy: blame the people.Footnote 42 He argues that ordinary folk, even those who are well-informed but clearly irrational, are always ready to be misled by demagogues but, at the end of the day, the crucial decisions to empower dictators such as Hitler was made by parts of the conservative establishment of the day.Footnote 43 With regard to contemporary right-wing populists, he claims that none of them have come to power without the collaboration of established conservative elites.Footnote 44
Müller also asserts that an increasing number of citizens at the lower end of the income spectrum no longer vote or participate in any other form in politics, and political leaders have no reason to care for those ‘disadvantaged communities’ who do not care to vote.Footnote 45 In Hungary the situation is even worse, in that about 40 per cent of the poorest and less educated part of the society overwhelmingly support Fidesz. Some of these people do not vote, but some vote for the governing party without considering that its policies are against their interests.Footnote 46 The phenomenon is described by Claus Offe as ‘participatory inequality’, which is especially characteristic in states with high income inequality that use austerity measures.Footnote 47
On the other hand, supporters of Fidesz cannot be released from responsibility either. We should not go as far as Daniel Goldhagen on the responsibility of ordinary Germans in the Holocaust,Footnote 48 or Sándor Márai – who, in 1945, before emigrating from Horthy's Hungary, wrote in his diaryFootnote 49 that the ‘middle class was culpable for the depth to which Nazi doctrines took root in Hungary’ – to observe that many voters for the right-wing authoritarian populist parties, especially those who are educated, are aware of those parties’ exclusionary, nationalistic, homophobic, autocratic ideas and aims, and they still support them. Among those are intellectuals and academics, including constitutional law scholars.Footnote 50
4. The perspectives of a ‘constitutional moment’
Taking into account the current state of constitutionalism in Israel and Hungary, let me try to assess whether the attempts to achieve illiberal constitutionalisation in Israel and the constant state of illiberal constitutionalism in Hungary represent a constitutional moment á la Ackerman. In Israel, despite the 64 to 56 majority of the governing coalition parties in the Knesset, according to recent opinion polls almost two-thirds of Israelis oppose the judicial reform and believe that the Supreme Court should have the power to strike down laws that are incompatible with one of the Basic Laws.Footnote 51 This means that one of the central tenets of Ackerman's constitutional moment – ‘the self-conscious consent of a majority of ordinary citizens’ – is present. This commitment to the values of the separation of powers and judicial independence does not necessarily mean that the same majority of citizens would support a constitution that would change the constitutional identity approach of the 2018 Basic Law on Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people, and guarantee equal rights for all citizens of the country, including those of non-Jewish Arabs. One indication against this is that, according to the same survey, only a minority of the respondents feared a negative impact of the overhaul on the rights of Arab Israelis.Footnote 52 The question is if the current majority of Israeli citizens and their representatives in the Knesset were to agree to adopt a new written constitution – which codifies the status quo prior to the judicial overhaul, but without resolving the problem of non-Jewish Israeli citizens and residents,Footnote 53 and also not promoting a two-state solutionFootnote 54 – how would this constitutional system differ from the current regime, characterised by Gila Stopler as ‘semi-liberal constitutionalism’?Footnote 55
The other, related question about the content of a future Israeli constitution is the role of religion, because in addition to the illiberal character of the state there were growing demands for it to be a religious state also. This is especially true over the last four decades, during which there has been a continuous decline in the political power and representation of Israel's historically hegemonic and largely secular Ashkenazi constituencies. At the same time, political forces representing Orthodox religious Mizrahi residents have grown stronger through their participation in successive Likud governments. As Hanna Lerner was arguing a decade ago, the paradigm of liberal constitutionalism is not a relevant framework for such religiously divided societies, such as Israel. She claims that under conditions of disagreement over the state's religious character, the drafters of constitutional design in different countries have adopted either a permissive or a restrictive constitutional approach to address their intense internal religious conflicts. The permissive constitutional approach of Israel uses strategies of constitutional ambiguity, ambivalence and vagueness to allow the political system greater flexibility in future decision making regarding controversial religious issues. By contrast, a restrictive constitutional approach, such as that chosen in Turkey, uses specific constitutional constraints, designed to limit the range of possibilities available for future decision makers, when addressing religion-state relations. Permissive constitutions, she argues, for the most part allowed for greater freedom of religion than did restrictive constitutions, especially guaranteeing the survival of minority religious groups. By contrast, freedom from religion, namely the right of individuals to opt out of a religious affiliation, is limited under permissive constitutional arrangements such as Israel, compared with the restrictive constitutions of other states.Footnote 56 Religious groups currently enjoy complete autonomy under Israeli law, while in Turkey, for instance, until 2013 respect for religious expression in the public sphere was limited. For example, Muslim women were prohibited from wearing headscarves in public institutions, including universities and public schools. The question is whether this status quo can be retained in a new constitution, amidst the increased percentage of citizens who are ultra-Orthodox, and the growing political role of religious parties, which will shift politics further to the right and strain Israel's liberal democratic character.Footnote 57 Also, religious marriage and divorce are the only options for all citizens, including non-believers and atheists. This means that the right to marry is violated for hundreds of thousands of citizens, including inter-religious couples or the 4 per cent of the population who are not affiliated with any religion. Will this situation be entrenched in the written constitution?
In more general terms, Israel in its constitutional moment – after the repeated failures of the ‘peace process’ and the two-state solution – faces very limited options regarding the identity of its new constitution. It either remains Jewish but ceases to be a democracy, or it could become a genuinely multi-ethnic democracy, but would in that case cease to be ‘Jewish’.Footnote 58
In Hungary, by contrast, there is no significant support for any change in the Orbán government's 2011 Constitution, which questions even the democratic legitimacy of suggestions raised during the scholarly debate referred to above regarding the unlawful amendment of the illiberal Fundamental Law. This also means that, while in Israel the current constitutional crisis is a sign of the constitutional moment, in Hungary the overwhelming majority of voters do not consider the autocratic constitutional system to be a failure. The presence of single-party dominance is also a sign of the lack of a constitutional moment in Hungary, as argued in the case of Japan, India, Mexico and South Africa by Rosalind Dixon and Guy Baldwin.Footnote 59 Mass protests, another characteristic of constitutional moment proposed by Juliano Benvindo, are present only in Israel, not in Hungary.Footnote 60
The recent attacks on the separation of powers and guaranteed fundamental rights in Israel carries the danger that the country – which, with the caveat of discrimination against Arab Israelis can be considered at least a ‘semi-liberal democracy’ since its establishment 75 years ago – comes closer to the fully fledged illiberal regime of Hungary. However, if we consider civil resistance against illiberal constitutionalisation, while there is none in Hungary, the Israelis are holding protests many months after the government introduced its plans to dismantle judicial independence. Because of the conscious opposition by the majority of Israeli citizens to the overhaul, there is indeed a ‘constitutional moment’ right now in Israel, which can lead to entrenching basic elements of liberal democracy into new Basic Laws, or maybe even into the first written constitution of the State of Israel. In contrast to this development, in Hungary, since the adoption of the ‘illiberal’ Fundamental Law in 2011, there has been no ‘constitutional enthusiasm’ to reinstitute the liberal democracy introduced in 1989 without serious public involvement in a constitutional moment.
Acknowledgements
Not applicable.
Funding statement
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The author declares none.