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Nefeli Lappa 24 • 02 • 2023

Unjustified shortening of the public consultation period by the Ministry of Health – March 2023

Nefeli Lappa
Unjustified shortening of the public consultation period by the Ministry of Health – March 2023
24 • 02 • 2023

On February 24, 2023, the Ministry of Health posted a bill entitled “Modernization of the law on organ donation and transplantation” for public consultation. However, by stipulating that the consultation would last until March 1, 2023, i.e. for only five (5) days, the Ministry violated the legislative procedure stipulated by Law 4622/2019 and the rules of good legislation.

Articles 57 et seq. of law 4622/2019 contain provisions on the legislative procedure and the principles of good lawmaking. According to Article 61 of the above law, public consultation is to be carried out on legislative bills through the website www.opengov.gr and should last for two (2) weeks.

It was stipulated that the consultation period would end at 08:00 am on 1 March 2023, i.e. five (5) days later, which is less than the minimum of one week set by Article 61 of Law No. 4622/2019. It should be noted that neither the regulatory impact analysis accompanying the draft law during the consultation nor the regulatory impact analysis accompanying the draft law when it was introduced for adoption (see Law 5034/2023) contains any reference as to why this shortening of the public consultation period was deemed necessary.

Where is the problem with the Rule of Law?

Good lawmaking is a constitutional objective linked to the rule of law.

Articles 57 et seq. of Law 4622/2019 include rules related to the legislative process and good lawmaking, which are also detailed in the Manual of Legislative Methodology. These establish that bills should be subject to a public consultation period of 2 weeks, which may be shortened to one week only in absolutely exceptional cases, and for sufficiently documented reasons. 

In this particular case, however, the Ministry of Health submitted a bill for public consultation for a period of only five days, without giving substantiated reasons for this shortening of the consultation period beyond the legally permissible minimum of seven days.

Nefeli Lappa
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