Reported 8 months ago
Premier Su Tseng-chang emphasized that if the parliament's vote to reconsider the reform proposal on June 21 does not pass, he will seek a constitutional interpretation after the relevant parliament reform laws take effect. The reforms include normalizing the Presidential State of the Union address, adding legislative investigatory powers, hearing rights regulations, amending the Criminal Code, strengthening personnel consent rights, and implementing a record vote system for the Legislative Yuan President and Vice President, affecting five laws. The government claims the reforms could impede governing and may even violate the constitution, sparking protests and debates surrounding democratic principles and separation of powers.
Source: YAHOO