GD's Mdinaradze refutes alleged non-convention of Parliament's first session as legally groundless
Mamuka Mdinaradze, the Executive Secretary of Georgian Dream, asserted that claims suggesting the new parliament’s first session cannot be convened are incomprehensible.
Mdinaradze found it challenging to offer a serious comment regarding the legal complaints.
“Their journalists, politicians, and activist representatives are repeatedly asserting that 300,000 votes were falsified in electronic elections, claiming there is justification for not convening the first session. They have completely strayed from reason. The situation is so absurd that it is difficult to provide a serious response.
No norm or provision in any regulation or constitution would support their claims. If there is no legal basis, if no legal regulation supports their argument, how can they stop or obstruct anything? What are they even talking about?
Today, we even heard a new allegation that Kalandarishvili should not attend the first session, with someone filing a lawsuit. They are simply fabricating issues and initiating lawsuits. None of this has any legal foundation, making it challenging to engage in a serious discussion about it, just as it is difficult to seriously address the alleged falsification of 300,000 votes in electronic elections,” Mdinaradze emphasized.
As a reminder, Constitutional Court Chairman Merab Turava stated that the deadline for reviewing election-related constitutional complaints is one month, and the issue of convening a session has not been raised with them.