The government’s dominance in legislation is shown in the National Assembly’s 2025 performance report.

The National Assembly’s (lower house) 2025 performance report has been made public.

In the National Assembly, the administration continued to have a distinct advantage when it came to legislation in 2025. Only 31 laws were passed out of 42 government measures and 49 private members’ bills. There were eleven motions for adjournment, all of which were denied.

Only 1,442 of the 6,694 starred questions that were submitted during the year had responses.

The bulk of the 336 public attention notices that were submitted could not be discussed, according to the report. In addition, only 53 calling attention notices were debated. Sessions of the assembly were regularly adjourned.

Thirty-three privilege motions were filed; six were referred to committees, nine were denied, and sixteen are still pending.

Only 55 of the 295 proposals were added to the agenda under Rule 259. There was also a glaring numerical disparity in the House.

The opposition lags behind in passing legislation, according to the study. Just 1,442 of the 6,694 starred questions that were submitted during the year were answered. 285 questions were either denied or not submitted at all, while 1,395 questions were accepted but expired since there were no responses.

Throughout the year, the opposition was limited to slogans, demonstrations, and speeches, while the administration implemented laws primarily in accordance with its own priorities.

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