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Christiana Stilianidou 29 • 12 • 2022

The titling of legislation in the year 2022 and the rules of good legislative practice

Christiana Stilianidou
The titling of legislation in the year 2022 and the rules of good legislative practice
29 • 12 • 2022

In 2022, 131 laws were passed. The titles of 58 of these laws contained the phrases “and other provisions”, “other urgent provisions” or something similar, indicating the circumvention or even violation of good lawmaking rules. This is because the fact that the titles of the laws contain the above phrases indicates either that the laws in question contain provisions unrelated to their main subject matter or that amendments unrelated to the subject matter of the law have been adopted into these laws.

Good lawmaking is a constitutional objective linked to the rule of law. In order to ensure the purpose of good lawmaking, provisions of the Constitution, the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament and Law No. 4622/2019 regulate issues relating to the legislative process and set certain rules to be followed when drafting, filing and voting on a bill or an amendment. Based on these general rules and Article 59(5) of Law No. 4622/2019, the Manual of Legislative Methodology was drafted in 2020, which analyses and specifies the rules to be followed in the legislative process. As stated in the aforementioned Manual (see, inter alia, pp. 18-19, 47), the title of a bill (and subsequently of a law) is particularly important for the accessibility of the law and must succinctly convey the full scope of the legislation so that the addressees can immediately understand whether and to what extent the bill concerns them. At the same time, references to “other provisions”, which is common practice when the bill contains provisions unrelated to its main regulatory subject matter, should be avoided because it creates ambiguity and is therefore contrary to the principles of efficiency and accessibility as principles of good lawmaking.

In this way, however, the requirements of Article 74 of the Constitution and Article 85 of the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament, as analysed and specified in p. 18, 19, 24, 77 of the Manual of Legislative Methodology (which requires that bills should not contain unrelated provisions), Articles  87, 88 and 101  of the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament, as analysed and specified on pp. 4, 18, 63, 70-71, 77-78 of the Manual of Legislative Methodology (which defines the specific conditions under which an amendment may be introduced for voting and the content it must have) and Article 58 of Law 4622/2019  (which defines the principles of good lawmaking) are disregarded or even violated.

Where is the problem with the rule of law?

In a state governed by the rule of law, the government and the Parliament must produce laws by applying both the Constitution and the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament, as well as the other rules that have been established to guarantee and promote good and transparent lawmaking practices.

In Greece, however, the violation of the rules of good lawmaking seems to be a long-standing and systematic problem.

As can be seen from the titles of the laws passed in 2022, the reference to ‘other provisions’ is a particularly frequent phenomenon, despite the fact that this practice has been identified as a cause of ambiguity and as contrary to the principles of efficiency and accessibility as principles of good lawmaking. The use of such phrases raises concerns as to whether the rules of good lawmaking are followed in substance during the lawmaking process.

Christiana Stilianidou
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