Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claims that, in the absence of a constitution, the Israeli legislature (the Knesset) is supreme and can change anything with a bare majority (61 votes).
Viewing the issue as a matter of politics and recognizing that the Israeli Supreme Court has not been an 'activist' court for the most part, I expect the Court to point out the legislation's illiteracy and ask the Knesset to define it more explicitly. That will offer the PM and Knesset another opportunity to act 'reasonably' if they want to return the country to sanity.
Viewing the issue as a matter of politics and recognizing that the Israeli Supreme Court has not been an 'activist' court for the most part, I expect the Court to point out the legislation's illiteracy and ask the Knesset to define it more explicitly. That will offer the PM and Knesset another opportunity to act 'reasonably' if they want to return the country to sanity.
You're probably right.