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Christianna Stylianidou
Legislative process 2025: Concerns regarding amendments
31 • 12 • 2025

For yet another year, many amendments were submitted, debated and ultimately adopted even though they failed to meet the legal criteria regarding both the timing of their submission and the substance of their content.

To safeguard the purpose of good law‑making, provisions of the Constitution, the Rules of Procedure of Parliament and Law 4622/2019 regulate issues related to the legislative drafting and law‑making process and set out rules that must be followed when drafting, submitting and adopting a bill or an amendment.

The way in which ministerial amendments should be submitted, debated and voted on – including when and with what content – is regulated by Article 74(5) of the Constitution and Articles 87, 88 and 101(5) of the Rules of Procedure of Parliament.

For the purposes of this report:

i) “Late” amendments are those submitted either on the same day or the day before the vote on the law or the start of the Plenary debate (in cases where multiple sittings took place).

ii) “Unrelated” amendments are those containing provisions not directly connected to the main subject of the law. An amendment is considered unrelated when both of the following apply:

  • it was submitted by a ministry other than the one sponsoring the bill, or by multiple ministries, or it was submitted by the sponsoring ministry but included provisions regulating issues not directly related to the subject(s) of the bill placed in consultation; and
  • its provisions were ultimately included in a part, section or chapter of the adopted law titled “other provisions”, “other urgent provisions”, “provisions under the competence of the Ministry…”, “specific provisions”, etc.

In 2025, 97 legislative acts were adopted (Laws 5168/2025 to 5264/2025), of which:

  • 34 were “International Conventions” (ratifications of treaties, agreements, memoranda of understanding, decisions, etc.)
  • 63 were “Laws”

A closer examination of 47 of these laws showed that one or more amendments were submitted in 38 of them. In total, 53 ministerial amendments were submitted, containing 223 articles.

Despite the constitutional and procedural rules:

  • 44 amendments were submitted either on the same day or the day before the start of the Plenary debate on the relevant bill.
  • 25 amendments were submitted after 22:00, with the debate beginning the following day.
  • 4 amendments were submitted on a Friday after 13:00.
  • 51 amendments contained provisions that did not appear to relate directly to the main subject(s) of the bill. This assessment is reinforced by the fact that the legislator itself placed these provisions in chapters titled “other provisions”, “other urgent provisions”, etc.

The dataset on which these findings are based is available here.

Further issues and concerns regarding the 2025 legislative process can be found in the Joint Report on the State of the Rule of Law in Greece.

Where is the problem with the rule of law?

Under the rule of law, the Government and Parliament must follow and apply the rules established to guarantee and promote practices of good and transparent law‑making.

In Greece, however, the failure to adhere to the principles of good law‑making appears to be a long‑standing and systemic problem.

The continued practice in 2025 of submitting and adopting unrelated and/or late amendments reflects an entrenched pattern that inevitably raises serious concerns.

Christianna Stylianidou
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