(de-news.net) – The Federal Government has issued a favorable assessment of its declared ‘Fall of Changes’ as the winter season approaches, presenting the initiative as a period of unusually intense legislative activity. Government spokesperson Stefan Kornelius reported that the cabinet had convened on 27 occasions and, during these sessions, had adopted a total of 425 measures. Of these, 136 were formal draft laws, while an additional three legislative proposals emerged from five written circulation procedures conducted outside regular meetings. Taken together, these actions were portrayed as evidence of a broad and ambitious reform agenda that had been formally enacted across multiple policy domains.
Kornelius emphasized that the evaluation should not be confined to the sheer volume of decisions but must also consider their substantive importance. He argued that the government had achieved notable progress in at least two or three major areas of policy. Among the sectors highlighted were external security, where strategic adjustments were said to strengthen national resilience; administrative simplification, intended to reduce bureaucratic obstacles; migration, which required complex negotiations and regulatory changes; and economic renewal, aimed at stimulating growth and competitiveness.
After several months of concentrated legislative work, the spokesperson concluded that the declared reform season had been comprehensively fulfilled. The government’s account suggested that both the quantitative scale of measures and the qualitative depth of reforms demonstrated a sustained commitment to structural change, thereby validating the characterization of the period as the ‘Fall of Changes.’