ZAGREB, April 1 (Hina) - The Croatian parliament will on Wednesday vote on a bill of changes to the Election Law as proposed by the parliament's Committee on the Constitution, Rule Book and Political System.
ZAGREB, April 1 (Hina) - The Croatian parliament will on Wednesday
vote on a bill of changes to the Election Law as proposed by the
parliament's Committee on the Constitution, Rule Book and
Political System. #L#
The changes are necessary to adjust the Election Law the already
adopted changes to the Constitution and the new Constitutional Law
on Minority Rights and they do not represent any major
interventions in the 1999 law.
Under that law, according to which the January 2000 parliamentary
elections were held, voters elected 14 deputies in ten
constituencies (140 in total), five minority representatives and
six Diaspora deputies, who were elected under the so-called non-
fixed quota.
One of the major changes in the bill enables minorities to elect
eight deputies (the current law envisages five minority MPs) -
three Serb, one Hungarian and Italian each, one joint
representative of the Bosniak, Montenegrin, Macedonian and Slovene
minorities, and one joint representative of the Czech, Slovak,
Polish, Romany and Ruthenian minorities.
The Austrian, Albanian, Bulgarian, German, Romanian, Turkish,
Ukrainian, Vlach and Jewish minorities would also elect one
representative.
The bill also offers an alternative solution - the Serb minority
would elect one deputy at least and three at the most, and their
final number would be determined by the non-fixed quota.
The adoption of the bill requires a majority vote, i.e. the votes of
76 deputies.
The adoption of the bill will enable Croatian voters to
participate, for the first time in modern Croatia, in two
consecutive elections according to more or less the same criteria.
The deadline for the parliament to fulfil a constitutional
obligation of defining basic electoral regulations one year before
elections expires tomorrow. The mandate of the current
parliamentary composition expires on April 2, 2004.
(hina) rml sb