In Slovenia, parliament initiates constitutional change to judicial appointments process

By Eva Horvat, 19 October 2023
Flag of Slovenia (photo credit: OpenClipart-Vectors via pixabay)
Flag of Slovenia (photo credit: OpenClipart-Vectors via pixabay)
The Slovenian parliament initiated a procedure to transfer judicial appointments from parliament to the president and a change in the composition of the Judicial Council, which vets the candidates, on [18 October]. Under the bill’s current version, which is yet to be finalised, the final nod of approval for judges would no longer be made in parliament but by the president. As is the case now, candidates would be put forward by the Judicial Council, but with a two-thirds majority instead of a regular majority. The Judicial Council would be regulated by a special law and is planned to expand from four members to 15. Parliament would elect seven members with a two-thirds majority of the present MPs, choosing from university law professors, lawyers and other jurists, while judges would select eight from among their ranks. [...] These are designed to depoliticise judicial appointments and strengthen the independence of the judiciary. [...] The parliamentary constitutional commission will now finalise the draft constitutional bill and send it to the plenary, where a two-thirds majority is needed to pass.
Read the full article here: EURACTIV

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