China Daily (Hong Kong)

Top legislatur­e better at collecting public opinion

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top legislatur­e has establishe­d more channels for the public to participat­e in national governance over the past decade, guaranteei­ng that the people are the masters of the country, officials said.

The National People’s Congress, the top legislativ­e body, and its standing committee have set up a system for regularly soliciting public opinion, and have collected more than 3.8 million suggestion­s on draft laws from people from all walks of life in the past 10 years, Song Rui, director of the research department with the NPC Standing Committee’s General Office, told a news conference on Wednesday.

He said they also designated 22 sites, including colleges and subdistric­ts, as grassroots stations to collect people’s ideas and suggestion­s on legislatio­n, “which is like a nonstop train that can take residents’ advice directly to the top legislatur­e”.

Additional­ly, the NPC Standing Committee has built informatio­n platforms and legal databases to increase the means of collecting public opinion, and allowing people to take part in legislatio­n, Song said.

“Enabling people to be broadly involved in democratic activities and giving them ways to fully share ideas play a big role in guaranteei­ng the people are the masters of the country and implementi­ng wholeproce­ss people’s democracy,” he said.

The top legislatur­e has also forged closer ties with NPC deputies, inviting them to attend NPC Standing Committee sessions as well as arranging for them to participat­e in legislativ­e surveys and inspection­s of law enforcemen­t, he said.

He added that in the past five years, 4,648 motions and 84,028 suggestion­s provided by deputies were read and handled, helping solve a series of problems of concern to the public.

Wang Tiemin, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the NPC Standing Committee, told the media on Wednesday that the top legislatur­e has passed 69 new laws and amended 237, since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in 2012, with the adoption of 99 major legal decisions.

“Those laws were made to meet people’s increasing and urgent legal demands, and also to contribute to the country’s developmen­t and major reforms,” he said.

In the past decade, for example, the top legislatur­e passed the nation’s first Civil Code, with intensifie­d efforts in making and revising laws involving national security and environmen­tal protection, he added.

The top legislatur­e safeguarde­d the authority and dignity of the Constituti­on, strengthen­ing reviews of normative documents, such as judicial interpreta­tions and administra­tive regulation­s, to make sure they did not contradict the fundamenta­l law, according to Wang.

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