
The article focuses on the role of the Civic Parliamentary Club (OKP) in the transformation of state security bodies between 1989 and 1990. Special attention is drawn to the role of OKP in the preparation, adoption and implementation of the so-called police laws, i.e. new regulations regarding the operation of the Ministry of the Interior, the Office of State Protection and the Police. This case is analysed in the broader context of the law-making process in the period of political transformation, the related tensions and the conflict of interests between parliamentarians, the government and their political background.