Categories: Op-Eds
The Dangerous Ms. Shaked

“Who cares if she's beautiful? Ayelet Shaked is dangerous,” was the title of a May 14, 2015 article in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, “The Daily Beast,” headlined another one as “The Scariest Politician in Israel.” “Foreign Policy magazine trying to be more subtle titled its article “Ayelet Shaked makes Benjamin Netanyahu look like a liberal. And now she’s the justice minister.”
In fact the 39 years old, in what the New York Times has called “the most contentious appointment in a much-criticized new government,” commented in an interview that “...the biggest shock of public life was the volume of the hatred,” she encountered.
Mrs. Shaked, who was elected to the Knesset in 2013, earned her reputation, as a “diligent and ambitious politician, who has strongly criticized the existing laws and legal establishment.”
Once a member of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Likud party, she changed affiliations because she felt that “every leader takes the Likud to the left.”
“Wanting to belong to a party “to the right of Netanyahu, one that is based on the Bible and Jewish values, “ she helped in 2012, to plot Naftali Bennett’s coup to turn the old National-Religious Party into “the Jewish Home.”
Recognized as the party polemicist she argues that democracy is a “form of government rather than a central component of the state.” She opposes decisions she considers not to be determined by the people but by the members of the judiciary.
"Those opposed to this blurring of powers,” she says, “and I am of course included, are being defined as 'the sons of darkness,' while those who support depriving the right of the public to make decisions through their Knesset representatives are called 'sons of light.'"
In her commitment “to strengthen the Jewish identity” of Israel, “to have a democratic, Jewish, strong state,” she comes to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s government with a large agenda:
- Curtailing the power of the Supreme Court,
- Giving politicians more sway over judicial appointments
- Ousting Eritrean and Sudanese asylum-seekers.
- Reestablishment of a department in charge of Jewish identity in the schools.
- Push a “nationality bill” that would enshrine Israel as a legally Jewish state.
- Limiting the foreign funding of advocacy groups
- Annexation of some of the disputed West Bank lands.


June 19, 2026 






