TI-Georgia: Open Governance Parliamentary Council a Formality

On October 26, Transparency International-Georgia, a local watchdog, published a report evaluating the activities of the permanent parliamentary council on Open Governance, a consultative body designed to bring together MPs and civil society actors in a bid to enhance the transparency of governance and legislative process.

The report, covering the period from June 17, 2022, to July 31, 2023, reveals that the Council is failing to address the trend towards diminishing transparency of the Parliament and of the legislative process. The report says the Council became largely a formality.

Some of the key findings presented in the report are:

During the reporting period, the Council held four sessions and operated five working groups to fulfill obligations envisioned in the 2021-2022 Action Plan. Out of the 19 obligations from the plan, ten were fully or essentially fulfilled, six were partially fulfilled, while three obligations remained unfulfilled, according to the report.

“It is noteworthy that the Parliament has not fulfilled those ambitious obligations which would have led to significant improvements in enhancing the openness of the Parliament,” the report reads.

According to the watchdog, the action plan for 2023-2024 was approved belatedly, and it includes only three commitments which primarily center around analyzing and studying different practices. It does not prioritize tangible outcomes aimed at enhancing citizen participation in the Parliamentary process, and neither does it improve the transparency of the Parliament.

The report offers a set of recommendations:

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