Bangladesh requires Parliament to implement July Charter within 180 working days
Change
Bangladesh ordered the newly elected Parliament to function as a Constitutional Reform Council under the Constitution Reform Order 2025, giving it 180 working days to implement the July National Charter and requiring members to take separate oaths for their dual roles.
Why it matters
The directive creates a compressed, legally binding timetable that limits opportunities for prolonged debate or unilateral delay on constitutional and institutional changes. Contentious issues such as the design of the upper house and shifts in executive powers must now be resolved under that short implementation window, raising the need for rapid cross-party agreement.
Implications
- — BNP parliamentary leadership must negotiate and reconcile its proposed upper house seat allocation with the Charter’s proportional representation formula before the Council’s 180 working-day mandate expires.
- — Opposition party leaders represented in Parliament must engage in cross-party negotiations to finalise contested Charter provisions within the Council’s fixed implementation timeline.
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