Wpa Sec Stanev May 2026
Passed in 2016, this legislation was designed to reform Bulgaria’s Supreme Judicial Council (SJC). It introduced a quota of "moral and professional heavyweights"—law professors and senior attorneys—to sit alongside magistrates.
To the outside observer, the "WPA Sec. Stanev" might sound like a bureaucratic footnote. To constitutional lawyers in Sofia and Strasbourg, it represents the breaking point between political oversight and judicial independence. wpa sec stanev
Given the complexity of Balkan legal history, this post assumes you are looking for an analysis of the Constitutional Case #15 of 2016 and the subsequent "Stanev" amendments to the Judiciary Act. In the intricate world of Eastern European legal reform, few cases have echoed through the halls of the EU Court of Justice (CJEU) quite like the saga of the Wise People Act (WPA) and its enforcer, Hristo Stanev . Passed in 2016, this legislation was designed to
To break the "clan" system within the judiciary. The reality: It created a power vacuum that led to a constitutional crisis. Who is Hristo Stanev? Hristo Stanev is a controversial Bulgarian legal figure. While he was the Secretary of the SJC during the implementation of the WPA, his name became synonymous with Section 10 (the administrative enforcement clause) of the Judicial System Act. Stanev" might sound like a bureaucratic footnote
Here is a deep dive into why Section Stanev—and the amendments he championed—changed the way Europe views the rule of law. Before we discuss Sec. Stanev, we need the context of the Zakon za saveta na prokurorite (Prosecutor’s Council Act), colloquially known in legal circles as the "Wise People Act."

Deanna Ritchie
Editor-in-Chief at Calendar. Former Editor-in-Chief, ReadWrite, Editor-in-Chief and writer at Startup Grind. Freelance editor at Entrepreneur.com. Deanna loves to help build startups, and guide them to discover the business value of their online content and social media marketing.