Aleksandre Tabatadze

Aleksandre Tabatadze
Member of the Parliament of Georgia
Assumed office
17 April 2024
Personal details
Born (1969-04-05) 5 April 1969
PartyGeorgian Dream
Alma materTbilisi State University

Aleksandre Tabatadze (born 5 April 1969) is a Georgian politician and a member of the Parliament of Georgia from the Georgian Dream party.[1][2] He is the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Security. Prior to his parliamentary career, he held several high-ranking positions within the Georgian government, primarily in justice and security sectors.[3]

Early life and education

Tabatadze was born on 5 April 1969. He graduated from the Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University in 1997, with a degree in jurisprudence.[4]

Career

Before his election to parliament, Tabatadze served in multiple deputy ministerial roles across different government agencies. His career in senior executive roles began in 2012 when he was appointed Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs, a post he held for a year.[5] From 2013 to 2016, he served as a Deputy Minister of Justice.[6] He then moved to the State Security Service, where he was Deputy Head from 2016 until 2019.[7]

Tabatadze returned to the Ministry of Justice as a Deputy Minister from 2019 until 2020, before his election to parliament.[8] Tabatadze was elected to the Parliament of Georgia in the 10th convocation, taking office on 11 December 2020 as a member of the Georgian Dream party.[9]

He was re-elected in the 2024 parliamentary election for the 11th convocation, which began on 25 November 2024. During his tenure, he was appointed Chairman of the Committee on Defense and Security.[10]

Controversy

Promoting the "Foreign Agents" Law

In early 2025, Tabatadze, as the chairman of parliament's legal committee, was involved in submitting a bill that was a word-for-word translation of the U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) for consideration in Georgia.[11][12] Tabatadze acknowledged that the copied law contained "certain legal and substantive inaccuracies" and included references to U.S. institutions like Congress that were incompatible with the Georgian context. This law was widely seen as a replacement for a previously proposed "foreign agent" law that had sparked massive protests in 2023 and was passed in 2024 despite continued public outcry. Critics and the European Commission for Democracy through Law (the Venice Commission) have firmly rejected comparisons between the U.S. FARA and the Georgian law, stating that the Georgian version creates an "automatic, unevidenced, and irrebuttable presumption" that organizations receiving foreign funding are pursuing the interests of a foreign power.[11]

Sponsoring Invasive Surveillance Legislation

In 2025, Tabatadze co-sponsored a draft law that sought to significantly expand the surveillance powers of Georgian law enforcement and security services.[13] The proposed amendments would have allowed the state to surveil individuals suspected under a wide range of criminal charges for an unlimited time and without ever notifying them that they had been monitored. A coalition of 11 civil rights groups, including Transparency International Georgia, strongly criticized the bill, calling it a "step back" for human rights. They argued that if a person never learns they were under surveillance, they cannot dispute it in court, effectively stripping them of a constitutional right to a fair trial.[13]

References

  1. ^ "Aleksandre Tabatadze — Parliament of Georgia". parliament.ge. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  2. ^ "Alexander Tabatadze and the Committee members met with the Chair of the Internal Affairs Committee of the Turkish Parliament — Parliament of Georgia". parliament.ge. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  3. ^ "Defence and Security Committee Chair participates in Parliamentary Intelligence-Security Forum". 1TV. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  4. ^ "Aleksandre Tabatadze — Parliament of Georgia". parliament.ge. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  5. ^ "New Deputy Head of State Security Service Appointed".
  6. ^ "Aleksandre Tabatadze appointed on post of Deputy Justice Minister". 1TV. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  7. ^ "Tabatadze: Chorchana checkpoint opening was not coordinated, leading to poor outcome". 1TV. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  8. ^ "Security Service Deputy Head becomes Deputy Justice Minister". www.interpressnews.ge. 2019-05-02. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  9. ^ "One moment, please..." www.eastwatch.eu. Archived from the original on 2025-06-18. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  10. ^ "Aleksandre Tabatadze: We got a very bad consequences with the Chorchana checkpoint, the Georgian side set up one, and the opposing side set up 5 checkpoints and one mobile post — the Security Service got involved for de-escalation". www.interpressnews.ge. 2025-06-16. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  11. ^ a b "Georgian Dream introduces word-for-word 'translation' of US FARA legislation, previously called 'a total disaster' by PM Kobakhidze". OC Media. 2025-02-25. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  12. ^ "Georgia Dream Introduces Criminal Liability for Non-Compliance with Foreign Agents Registration Act". Civil Georgia. Retrieved 2025-11-29.
  13. ^ a b "Georgian Dream pushes ahead with invasive new surveillance bill". OC Media. 2022-04-22. Retrieved 2025-11-29.