The Legislative Yuan ended its last full session meeting last night, nearly a full day longer than it had planned, passing 96 laws or amendments -- 43 of them during three days of marathon meetings and negotiations between party caucuses.
Lawmakers also vowed that a group of so-called "sunshine laws" -- which were not passed -- would be given priority in the next session that opens on Feb. 18.
After extending the current session half a month longer -- it should have ended in mid-December -- lawmakers from all three major parties and independent alliances said that they worked hard to pass important legislation.
During the previous session, that lasted from February to May 1999, only 77 bills made it through their third and final readings.
"Although some laws might have been passed for political reasons, this session still saw the passage of important civil right laws relating to soldiers, women and victims of the 921 earthquake," Chen Chi-mai (
But some scholars still criticized the fact that most lawmakers spent the majority of the session's time on a small number of important or controversial political bills meant to attract media attention, while paying little attention to researching and drawing up conscientious and careful laws.
"Legislators passed those laws in only a couple of days, while what they really care about are their own or their party's interests," Joseph Wu (吳釗燮), a political analyst at National Chengchi University, said.
Some of the laws, Wu said, are either poorly drafted or unrealistic, because lawmakers only negotiated over a short period of time to decide on their priorities for which laws would be passed.
"The `gaming article' that passed at the end of the last session is one of the latest examples," Wu said. The article, which allows gambling on internationally sanctioned sporting events, was passed as a rider to the Welfare Lottery Act, contrary to the wishes of leadership of both major parties.
Wu said that as party caucus leaders negotiated the passage of many laws within a few days of the close of that session, a group of lawmakers inserted the article onto the agenda.
"Then it was passed without proper consideration," Wu said.
This last full session meeting, which continued past midnight on Friday and into Saturday, reviewed the most controversial five laws with full voting procedures.
The KMT overpowered opposition parties to pass their versions of the laws -- including the Coast Guard Administration Law (
After a break that lasted several hours, the meeting resumed yesterday afternoon to pass another 12 laws.
Legislative Yuan officials announced that 96 laws were passed in the entire session, compared to 61 in the previous one.
All three party caucus leaders made an announcement to explain their efforts in helping pass the laws and to express their expectations for the next session.
"To prove that we are determined to carry out reforms, the `sunshine laws' will be our priority," Tseng Yung-chuan (
Tseng stressed that caucus leaders from all parties had signed a statement promising to pass four new laws on Feb. 22.
The four so-called `sunshine laws' are: the Political Party Law (
But a KMT lawmaker, who asked not to be identified, said that even within the party there is some debate over how far to go on the issue of party assets. Some people would rather see things remain the way they are, he said. "Some heavyweights inside the KMT still oppose Lien's ideas on party assets."
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