
Slovenian Parliament Rejects Referendum on Intervention Law
The Slovenian Parliament has rejected a trade union initiative to hold a referendum on an intervention law. The decision was met with differing views from political figures, with some calling it 'misleading' and others 'unreasonable maneuvers'.
Sources
No articles available in your preferred languages.
2 articles available in other languages below.
Štrukelj o 'zavajanju', Cigler Kralj o 'nerazumnih manevrih'
Nova koalicija in sindikati na okopih. Referendum o interventnem zakonu je padel in se seli na ustavno sodišče. Če tega sklepa ne sprejmemo, kršimo ustavo, je že pred glasovanjem v hramu demokracije povedal prvopodpisani Janez Cigler Kralj, poslanci pa so nato z 48 glasovi za in 35 proti zaprli vrata referendumu o interventnem zakonu. Na drugi strani sindikati trdijo, da gre za 'zakon za razkroj Slovenije', sprejet brez socialnega dialoga.
Read full article →Interventni zakon: državni zbor je potrdil nedopustnost razpisa referenduma
DZ je odločil, da o zakonu o interventnih ukrepih ni mogoče razpisati naknadnega zakonodajnega referenduma. Sklep je podprlo 48 poslancev, proti jih je bilo 35.
Read full article →Coverage Timeline
Related Stories

Trump Considers Military Action Against Iran Amid Hormuz Blockade Discussions; UK Declines to Join
just now

Philippine Senator Dela Rosa's Gun Licenses Revoked
just now

Philippine House of Representatives Approves Leadership Changes, Offers Ombudsman Cooperation
just now

2 minors tagged in death of child in Mt. Province village
just now