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Christiana Stilianidou
Legislative process – 2024: Reflections on the public consultation process
31 • 12 • 2024

The procedure followed in the public consultation process for laws passed in 2024 appears in several cases to have failed to take into account the rules and principles of good lawmaking.

Α. Articles 57 et seq. of Law 4622/2019 contain provisions on the legislative procedure and good lawmaking. According to Article 61 of Law 4622/2019, public consultation should be achieved by publishing the bill in order to ensure that all interested parties may be informed about upcoming planned legislation and given the opportunity to participate in a timely manner.  Consultation on draft legislation should last for two (2) weeks, which may be shortened to one (1) week or extended for one (1) more week, for duly justified reasons, which shall be set out in the report on the public consultation. The Ministry concerned should prepare this report, which shall be included in the final Regulatory Impact Assessment, shall accompany the regulation when it is submitted to Parliament, shall be posted on the public consultation website and shall be sent by e-mail to the e-mail addresses from which any comments were received.

We also note that in the Manual of Legislative Methodology (pp. 13-14 and 68), good lawmaking is said to require adherence to principles that derive from the democratic principle itself. An open and transparent process of drafting and evaluating the implementation of legislation is thus required, through accessibility and the possibility of submitting proposals. Consultation is not just a necessary formality, but an essential stage in the legislative process, which must be treated with particular attention and a positive attitude in order to improve the draft law. The Manual also specifies that the consultation period may be shortened to one (1) week or extended for a further one (1) week only in very exceptional cases and for duly justified reasons. …The purpose of the legislative consultation is to ascertain whether the public has a sufficient and accurate understanding of the basic provisions, as well as to gather any comments that may lead to improvements in the proposed provisions. In any case, the legislative committee must be prepared to amend the bill on the basis of comments or observations submitted during the consultation. A consultation report that merely records the comments made, without substantive engagement with them, is therefore not consistent with these principles.

Furthermore, despite the provisions of Article 61(4), only in 7 (out of 48) cases was the report on the public consultation posted on the opengov.gr website. We also note that in the personal experience of Vouliwatch, every time that we have submitted a comment during a public consultation, we have not received an email with the public consultation report.

Finally, it is worth mentioning that: 

  1. In the vast majority of the cases examined (44 out of 48), the bill submitted to Parliament contained more articles than the corresponding draft submitted for public consultation. In fact, the draft laws submitted to Parliament appear to have consisted of a total of 3,000 articles, with only 2,673 of them being found in the corresponding draft laws that had been submitted for public consultation
  2. The time period from the end of the public consultation to the submission of the draft law to the Parliament seems in several cases to be extremely limited [min: 0 days, max: 247 days, average:17.68 days, median: 3.5 days]. In 18 cases the bill was submitted to Parliament on the same or the next day after the end of the consultation. This raises serious concerns, as it calls into question whether the comments submitted during the consultation are (or indeed can be) taken into account.

The data on which all the above figures are based can be found here.

Where is the issue with the rule of law?

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

Chapter C of Part C of Law 4622/2019 (Articles 57 et seq.) includes rules related to the legislative process and good lawmaking, which are also specified in the Manual of Legislative Methodology. These sources also lay out the rules/principles to be followed in the public consultation process.

However, as Vouliwatch’s research shows, the above provisions are often bypassed, which raises serious concerns. This is because it does not appear to be exceptional that consultation deadlines are unduly shortened, that draft laws containing more articles than the corresponding draft submitted for public consultation are introduced for adoption (with the result that provisions are introduced for adoption which do not appear to have passed through the public consultation stage) or that the competent institutions generally fail to comply with their obligations under the consultation procedure.

Christiana Stilianidou
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