But the news did not suggest a complete reset after weeks of fraught relations: The ambassador, Thomas R Nides, said that no date had been fixed for any meeting, leaving open the possibility that it could be delayed if Netanyahu pushed ahead with the plan after a delay. The news was nevertheless one of several signs Tuesday that emotions were calming across Israel after concerns over the judicial overhaul had set off civil unrest on a scale rarely seen in the country and had exacerbated tensions with Biden administration.
After Netanyahu’s reversal, the country’s leading union called off a general strike, hospitals resumed full services after reducing them in protest Monday, and the main airport began to allow outbound flights again after putting them on hold a day earlier. Protesters feared that the government would resume the overhaul after only a superficial delay, and some demonstrations were still scheduled for Tuesday.