There are at least 5 parties in the ruling coalition that have specific religious orthodoxy as primary parts of their platform.
I agree that the traditional definition of theocracy is probably overkill when describing the Israeli government but specific religious beliefs drive politics there well out of proportion to the beliefs of the constituents.
In a way that feels out of line with secular western democracy at times.
Israel likes to say this, but it is not true. The hasidic jews especially enjoy rights that other Israelis just dont have, and they have a large amount of control over the government.
It is true… that is literally their governmental type. There are religious parties in Israel (just like the religious are largely in the GOP in the USA) but that doesn’t make it theocratic… unless you bend the definition of theocracy beyond all meaning.
That is all not to mention my second point which is that Israel isn’t even a particularly religious country compared to the west.
JumpCrisscross|2 years ago
Israel legally defines itself in law as the nation-state of the Jewish people [1].
It isn’t a textbook theocracy, but neither is Iran. Elected governments with theocratic characteristics?
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Law:_Israel_as_the_Nat...
kasey_junk|2 years ago
I agree that the traditional definition of theocracy is probably overkill when describing the Israeli government but specific religious beliefs drive politics there well out of proportion to the beliefs of the constituents.
In a way that feels out of line with secular western democracy at times.
HDThoreaun|2 years ago
jjcon|2 years ago
That is all not to mention my second point which is that Israel isn’t even a particularly religious country compared to the west.