According to Irakli Kadagishvili, "Georgian Dream" will file a lawsuit in the Constitutional Court today demanding the ban of three opposition parties

A lawsuit to ban three opposition forces—"United National Movement," "Coalition for Change," and "Lelo - Strong Georgia"—will be filed in the Constitutional Court today. This was announced to journalists by Irakli Kadagishvili, Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Regional Policy and Self-Government.

According to him, the main goal of the lawsuit is to ban anti-constitutional, destructive, and extremely damaging political parties and actions in Georgia.

"The lawsuit should be filed today. As you know, procedurally, the Constitutional Court has a maximum of 9 months to make a decision. Depending on what decision the court makes, we can then discuss the outcomes, but the broader goal of this lawsuit is not simply to ban certain parties. The main purpose is to ensure that, including through a Constitutional Court ruling, anti-constitutional, destructive, and extremely harmful political parties and actions are banned in Georgia, and to establish a standard so that no political party can damage the country by undermining the foundations of democracy, collapsing constitutional institutions, or disregarding the will of the people," Kadagishvili said.

For reference, "Georgian Dream" is appealing to the Constitutional Court to ban three parties. According to Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili, the constitutional lawsuit prepared by the ruling party demands that the following parties be declared unconstitutional and banned: "United National Movement," "Coalition for Change," and "Strong Georgia - Lelo."

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