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Taiwan's opposition lawmakers back Bill seen as unconstitutional
The Straits Times
|January 11, 2024
Taiwan's opposition lawmakers rejected on Jan 10 calls to reconsider a Bill that President Lai Ching-te's party and legal experts warn is "unconstitutional" and a threat to the self-ruled island's democracy.
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The Kuomintang (KMT) and Taiwan People's Party, which control Parliament, voted in December 2024 to amend the Constitutional Court Procedure Act, raising the threshold for hearing and deciding cases.
Critics of the Bill warn it could paralyze the Constitutional Court and restrict people's access to justice, while proponents argue the current minimum requirements for deciding cases are too low.
It was one of three legal amendments approved by the opposition bloc in December 2024 that sparked brawls among legislators and drew thousands of protesters to the streets.
There was no violence on Jan 10 as lawmakers voted 62-51 to reject a request from Mr Lai's Cabinet to reconsider the changes.
The amended Bill requires a minimum of 10 justices in the Constitutional Court to hear a case and at least nine of them to agree.
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