Opposition liberals and the Hungarian minority party, backed by some social democrats, who left the coalition government last week, submitted Tuesday a no-confidence motion to overthrow Prime Minister Emil Boc’s minority democrat liberal government.
Democrat liberals argued the motion is illegal because the Constitution forbids the submission of a second no-confidence motion, during the same parliamentary session and by the same signatories if the first motion has been rejected.
The opposition argued the constitutional ban applies for two consecutive no-confidence motions that are not initiated in response to the government’s request for a confidence vote to enact laws.
The Parliament’s standing offices decided the opposition’s no-confidence motion would be voted in a plenary session Tuesday, October 13.