In an interview, Netanyahu told the newspaper he would also revise another controversial element that would have given the ruling coalition more power to appoint judges, while adding that he was not sure what the new version would look like.
“I’m attentive to the public pulse, and to what I think will pass muster,” Netanyahu said.
Last week Israeli lawmakers began debating the bill that would limit the Supreme Court’s powers, rebooting a fiercely opposed judicial overhaul instigated by Netanyahu’s religious-nationalist coalition that has sparked mass protests.
The changes also stirred Western concern over Israel’s democratic health and spooked investors. Critics see them as an attempt to curb court independence by Netanyahu, who is on trial on graft charges that he denies.