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The current government includes a party led by Itamar Ben-Gvir, a former member of the very violent banned Jewish-supremacist Kach party, who is profiled in an excellent article from Tablet here: https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/rise-itamar-ben-gvir-armin-rosen

For some background on what that government is actually doing, Israel does not formally have a written Constitution. Occasionally the Knesset passes "Basic Laws", which are meant for inclusion in an eventual Constitution, but these are passed by the same simple majorities as all other kinds of laws. In 1992, the Supreme Court led by Aharon Barak (whose appointment process has been captured by the Israeli Bar Association, itself overwhelmingly left-wing) did something called a Constitutional Revolution, where they just kinda started treating the Basic Laws as a Constitution, and overturning laws that contradicted the Basic Laws, and other wings of the government went along with it out of weakness (here is a profile of Barak from 1998; the first sentence is enough to give you the flavor): https://azure.org.il/include/print.php?id=395

As you can imagine, many on the right are upset about this. At the moment, Netanyahu's Attorney General and possible heir, Yariv Levin, is trying to pass a law that would strip away the Supreme Court's ability to strike down laws. As you can imagine, it seems like there's a reasonable chance the Supreme Court will strike this down, and then nobody really knows what would happen: https://www.timesofisrael.com/levin-unveils-bills-to-weaken-top-court-enable-laws-to-be-immune-to-judicial-review/

Polls in Israel suggest most people agree that the Supreme Court has too much power and should be reined back, but Levin's reforms go very far, as already established ~50% of the population hates Netanyahu, and so there are widespread protests against the reforms.

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