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Updating fulltext page with whole lotta conspiracies
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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
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<head>
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<title>sovconst</title>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="../CSSstyle.css"/>
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<!--Fill in your link line for CSS and JS in the XSLT here! -->
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</head>
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<body>
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||||
<h1 id="title-index">Politics-Conspiracies-Project</h1>
|
||||
<nav id="menu">
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||||
<a href="../index.html">
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||||
<div class="button">Home</div>
|
||||
</a>
|
||||
<a href="../fulltext2.html">
|
||||
<div class="button">Fulltext</div>
|
||||
</a>
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||||
<a href="../analysis.html">
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||||
<div class="button">Analysis</div>
|
||||
</a>
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||||
<a href="../gallery.html">
|
||||
<div class="button">Gallery</div>
|
||||
</a>
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||||
<a href="../methods.html">
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||||
<div class="button">Methods</div>
|
||||
</a>
|
||||
<a href="../about.html">
|
||||
<div class="button">About</div>
|
||||
</a>
|
||||
<a href="../GitHub.html">
|
||||
<div class="button">GitHub <img alt="github icon"
|
||||
src="https://logos-download.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/GitHub_logo.png"
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width="15"/>
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</div>
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</a>
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</nav>
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<h2>sovconst</h2>
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||||
<p>To USSR-L subscribers,
|
||||
There have been some postings lately asking what SOVSET is and
|
||||
who it serves. In general it would not be proper to copy
|
||||
SOVSET's material and distribute in USSR-L, since SOVSET is
|
||||
a service subscribers pay for. In the case of the following
|
||||
article, which was posted by SOVSET today (Nov. 13), I own the
|
||||
copyright. I am posting it on USSR-L partly to give you an idea
|
||||
of the material carried by SOVSET.</p>
|
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<p>Darrell Hammer</p>
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||||
<p> WRITING A NEW RUSSIAN CONSTITUTION</p>
|
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<p> Darrell P. Hammer
|
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<span class="NORP">Indiana</span> University</p>
|
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<p> In June the newly elected Congress of People's Deputies of
|
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the RSFSR resolved to write a new constitution for the republic,
|
||||
and appointed a constitutional commission of 100 members under
|
||||
the chairmanship of Boris Eltsin.[1] The commission promptly
|
||||
created a "working group" of legal experts. These experts
|
||||
completed their work in less than four months, and have now
|
||||
submitted a working draft of a new constitution for consideration
|
||||
by the commission.[2]
|
||||
Despite the speed with which it was put together, the draft
|
||||
is long and detailed, probably too detailed to be a good
|
||||
constitution. Some of the detailed provisions, however, are
|
||||
dictated by Soviet experience and an obvious desire to keep
|
||||
history from repeating itself. For example, the draft makes
|
||||
usurpation of power a state crime, and makes it unlawful to
|
||||
establish a one-party system.
|
||||
The draft consists of five sections, which cover these
|
||||
topics: (1) basic principles, (2) rights and obligations of
|
||||
citizens, (3) civil society, (4) the federal system, and (5) the
|
||||
structure of the state. A number of questions, however, were
|
||||
left to be resolved by the constitutional commission. The
|
||||
experts were unable to agree on two important points, the nature
|
||||
of the Presidential office, and the electoral system.
|
||||
BASIC PRINCIPLES
|
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The working draft solemnly proclaims the <span class="NORP">Russian</span> Federation
|
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to be a sovereign state, repeating the language of the
|
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Declaration on Sovereignty adopted by the first Congress of
|
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People's Deputies.[3] Since the RSFSR was already "sovereign"[4]
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it was not clear what the declaration really meant. It did
|
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contain a "supreme law" clause, proclaiming the supremacy of the
|
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RSFSR Constitution and RSFSR laws on the entire territory of the
|
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republic.[5] The working draft is slightly different, and makes
|
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only the republic constitution the supreme law.
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The draft provides for strict separation of powers between
|
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the legislature (the Parliament or State Duma), the executive
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(President), and the courts.
|
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THE RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF CITIZENS
|
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The draft offers a long list individual rights, but it adds
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(like the ninth amendment to the U. S. Constitution) that the
|
||||
enumeration of certain rights should not be construed as limiting
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other rights not mentioned in the document. Citizens are
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promised equality of rights regardless of social origin,
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property, place of residence, language, race, attitude toward
|
||||
religion, political or other convictions, party membership, or
|
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previous criminal conviction. Men and women are to be treated
|
||||
equally. The rules for attaining or losing citizenship are to
|
||||
be defined by law, but no one can be arbitrarily deprived of
|
||||
citizenship, and no citizen can be forcibly deported. All
|
||||
citizens have the right to leave the federation, and to return.
|
||||
Citizens have the right to life, and capital punishment can be
|
||||
applied by a court only as an "exceptional measure" for the most
|
||||
serious crimes.[6]
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Interference in the private or family life of citizens is
|
||||
forbidden. The inviolability of the individual is guaranteed,
|
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and no one can be arrested except on the basis of a court order.
|
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The draft contains a long list of individual rights--most of
|
||||
which already exist on paper, such as the right to privacy of
|
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correspondence (USSR Constitution, art. 56).
|
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However, the restrictions on individual rights in article 39,
|
||||
50 and 51 of the USSR Constitution have been eliminated. The
|
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draft does provide that the exercise of rights by one person
|
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should not damage the legal interests or rights of another.
|
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Furthermore, individual rights may not be exercised for the
|
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purpose of overthrowing the political order by force, for
|
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propagandizing war, or for stirring up religious, social, or
|
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national hostility.[7]
|
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The writers of the draft were less categorical in defining
|
||||
economic rights. In contrast to the USSR Constitution (art. 42),
|
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which guarantees free medical care, the draft promises free care
|
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only to those who lack the resources to pay for it. The draft
|
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promises free access only to "basic education" (osnovnoe
|
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obrazovanie), without defining this term. It offers the
|
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individual "social protection against unemployment" but it does
|
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not guarantee everyone a job.
|
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As in the Declaration on Sovereignty, the draft provides that
|
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citizens are under the protection of the <span class="NORP">Russian</span> Federation, both
|
||||
on its territory and outside its borders.
|
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The draft provides for procedural rights in language much
|
||||
like that of the U. S. Constitution. It protects accused persons
|
||||
against double jeopardy and self-incrimination, and it guarantees
|
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the right to counsel. To protect these rights, the draft would
|
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create a new office, Supreme Defender (Verkhovnyi
|
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pravozashchitnik), who is elected by Parliament.
|
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CIVIL SOCIETY
|
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The chapter on civil society is designed to protect private
|
||||
property and the market system. The draft goes far beyond the U.
|
||||
S. Constitution, and proclaims private property as an
|
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"inalienable natural right." The essential clause of this
|
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follows:
|
||||
Free enterprise is recognized and guaranteed by law.
|
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The right to free enterprise (independent economic
|
||||
activity for the purpose of making a profit) is recognized
|
||||
for individuals, for societies organized for this purpose,
|
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for state enterprises, and for enterprises owned by local
|
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government.
|
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Relations between enterprises are regulated by contract.
|
||||
The state guarantees the right to freely enter into
|
||||
contracts, and to judicial resolution of conflict connected
|
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with them. Administrative compulsion to enter into deals is
|
||||
forbidden.
|
||||
The procedure and forms of entrepreneurial activity, of
|
||||
the creation of societies of entrepreneurs, and the
|
||||
obligations of entrepreneurs in relation to agencies of the
|
||||
state or local government, are defined by law.
|
||||
Under the heading of "civil society" the draft also discusses
|
||||
the family, education, culture, the media, religion, and public
|
||||
organizations and political parties. The family is described as
|
||||
the natural nucleus (yacheika) of society, and is put
|
||||
under the special protection of the state. Censorship is
|
||||
forbidden, and all political parties are promised equal access to
|
||||
state-owned radio and television. Neither the state nor any
|
||||
political party is to exercise a monopoly over the media.
|
||||
The federation is to be based on political and
|
||||
ideological pluralism (plyuralizm) which is said to rule
|
||||
out totalitarianism or any form of dictatorship. There is to be
|
||||
no official state ideology. The draft provides for a multiparty
|
||||
system, and a one-party system is explicitly outlawed. However,
|
||||
the draft allows the banning of political parties which propagate
|
||||
racial, religious, national, or class hatred, which employ force
|
||||
or threaten the forcible overthrow of the government, which
|
||||
oppose the law-governed state. Political parties are not to have
|
||||
organizations within the public service, in the armed forces, or
|
||||
in the police. (An alternate version would add state enterprises
|
||||
and educational institutions to this list.)
|
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THE FEDERAL SYSTEM
|
||||
In July the presidium of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet issued a
|
||||
call for a "federal treaty" to be negotiated among all the
|
||||
territorial units which make up the federation.[8] The
|
||||
constitution writers did not wait for this treaty, but proceeded
|
||||
to work out the details of the new federal structure.
|
||||
The federation is composed of national-territorial formations
|
||||
(republics) and regions (also referred to as federal
|
||||
territories), which are both referred to as the "subjects" of the
|
||||
federation. The republics presumably are the present-day
|
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autonomous republics, oblasts, and districts, and the territories
|
||||
are presumably the oblasts and krais. However, any territory
|
||||
can, through a referendum, transform itself into a republic, and
|
||||
any republic can become a territory. The draft lists twenty-four
|
||||
functions which are reserved to the federation, and of these the
|
||||
following are of special interest:
|
||||
1. Preserving the unity of an all-<span class="NORP">Russian</span> market.
|
||||
2. Control over natural resources.
|
||||
3. Managing the money supply, including foreign currency.
|
||||
4. Foreign policy and inter-state relations.
|
||||
5. Customs and border control.
|
||||
6. Activities in the cosmos.
|
||||
7. Standards for measurement and time.
|
||||
8. Protection of copyright and patents.
|
||||
9. Defense and the armed forces, security services and
|
||||
federal police.
|
||||
These are all functions which now belong to the all-union
|
||||
government. If they are in fact assumed by the <span class="NORP">Russian</span> republic,
|
||||
the adoption of this constitution would mean the disappearance of
|
||||
the USSR as we know it. In addition, the draft provides that the
|
||||
federation has jurisdiction in criminal law, as at present. In
|
||||
the case of civil, labor, economic and procedural law, the
|
||||
federation lays the foundation; writing specific law codes in
|
||||
these spheres is left to the national or regional governments.
|
||||
This provision follows the present model, where the all-Union
|
||||
Supreme Soviet enacts "fundamental laws" but the drafting of
|
||||
codes is left to the union republics.[9]
|
||||
The USSR is never mentioned in the working draft. However,
|
||||
the document provides that the <span class="NORP">Russian</span> Federation can voluntarily
|
||||
enter into a commonwealth or union with other sovereign states.
|
||||
The <span class="NORP">Russian</span> Federation would reserve to itself the right to
|
||||
secede from any such union. The <span class="NORP">Russian</span> language is to be the
|
||||
official language of the federation. Every subject, however, can
|
||||
choose a different official language for its own territory.
|
||||
THE ORGANIZATION OF THE STATE
|
||||
The experts were divided on the role and functions of the
|
||||
President, and so section 5 of the draft is given in two
|
||||
versions, A and B. Version A provides for a presidency more or
|
||||
less on the French model, while version B offers an American-style presidency. In version A the President appoints a premier,
|
||||
who presides over a government that is responsible to parliament.
|
||||
In version B, the President is not only chief of state but also
|
||||
head of the government.
|
||||
The President. The functions of chief of state are to
|
||||
be vested in a new official, the President of the Federation.
|
||||
The President is to be elected by popular vote for a four-year
|
||||
term, and is limited to two terms in office. The functions of
|
||||
the President which are common to both versions are the
|
||||
following:
|
||||
1. Represents the Federation in internal and international
|
||||
affairs.
|
||||
2. Guarantees the proper execution of the Constitution and
|
||||
the laws.
|
||||
3. Subject to the approval of Parliament, appoints the
|
||||
chairman and members of the Constitutional Court and the Supreme
|
||||
Court, ministers, ambassadors, and other officials.
|
||||
4. Removes ministers and other officials.
|
||||
5. Guides the execution of foreign policy and concludes
|
||||
treaties, subject to the approval of Parliament.
|
||||
6. Is the commander in chief of the armed forces.
|
||||
7. Declares a state of emergency, subject to approval of
|
||||
Parliament.
|
||||
8. When there is a danger of attack, calls for a partial or
|
||||
general mobilization, subject to approval of Parliament.
|
||||
9. In the event of attack, orders the armed forces into
|
||||
action, subject to approval of Parliament.
|
||||
10. Signs and promulgates laws of the Federation.
|
||||
The President has a veto power over legislation. In version B,
|
||||
he must act on legislation within fifteen days, and a veto can be
|
||||
overridden by a two-thirds vote of each house of Parliament.
|
||||
According to version A, the President's veto can be
|
||||
overridden by a simple majority. Version A also provides that
|
||||
the President, after consultation with the House of People's
|
||||
Representatives, appoints the premier. He is also empowered to ask the
|
||||
house for a vote of confidence in the government.
|
||||
The President can be removed from office by impeachment, but
|
||||
the process is complex. Either house of parliament can impeach
|
||||
the President by a two-thirds vote. The case is then heard by
|
||||
the Constitutional Court. The final decision is taken by the
|
||||
other house, and the President can be removed by a two-thirds
|
||||
vote. The role of the court in this process is not clear. The
|
||||
draft does not specifically say whether the court can terminate
|
||||
the impeachment process by acquitting the President, or merely
|
||||
gives an opinion.
|
||||
The draft also provides for a Vice President, whose primary
|
||||
function is to preside at joint sessions of the parliament. The
|
||||
Vice President can act for the President during temporary periods
|
||||
of absence. If the presidential office is vacated for any reason
|
||||
the Vice President assumes the office of President for the
|
||||
remainder of the term. If the vice presidency becomes vacant a
|
||||
new Vice President can be elected by the parliament.
|
||||
Parliament. The State Duma consists of two houses--a
|
||||
House of People's Representatives, and a Federal Council. The
|
||||
House of People's Representatives is directly elected by the
|
||||
people. The Federal Soviet consists of an equal number of
|
||||
representatives from each subject of the federation. The working
|
||||
draft offers two plans for election of the Federal Council--
|
||||
either direct election by the people, or election by the
|
||||
legislature of the territorial units that they represent.
|
||||
In version A, the Parliament is responsible for forming a
|
||||
government. However, the premier is nominated by the President
|
||||
and confirmed by the House of People's Representatives. Only
|
||||
this house can dismiss the government by a no-confidence vote.
|
||||
Either house can dissolve itself, in which case the President
|
||||
must call a new election for that house. Version A also provides
|
||||
that legislation originates in the House of People's
|
||||
Representatives.
|
||||
In version B the Parliament is elected for a fixed term, and
|
||||
elections are to be held on the second <span class="LOC">Sunday</span> of March every
|
||||
fourth year.
|
||||
The Electoral System. The draft provides for two
|
||||
different electoral systems. Version I provides for single-member constituencies which are to be approximately equal in
|
||||
size.
|
||||
Version II provides for proportional representation. The
|
||||
country is to be divided into a number of multi-member districts,
|
||||
and in each district deputies are to be elected by a list system.
|
||||
In countries where it has been tried, the list system has
|
||||
strengthened individual parties by making it virtually impossible
|
||||
to get elected without a party endorsement. The draft has tried to
|
||||
overcome this buy allowing individuals to get their names on the
|
||||
list without party approval, and by allowing the individual
|
||||
voters, if they choose, to list their order of preference among
|
||||
the candidates. This system would theoretically allow
|
||||
independent candidates to win election, but it would also
|
||||
confront the voter with a very complicated set of choices.
|
||||
The Courts. The draft proposes a Constitutional Court
|
||||
and a Supreme Court, but empowers Parliament to set up other,
|
||||
inferior courts. Judges of these two top-ranked courts are
|
||||
appointed by the President with the approval of Parliament.
|
||||
Other federal judges are appointed by the President alone.
|
||||
Judges are to be appointed for life, except that Parliament may
|
||||
set a compulsory retirement age.[10]
|
||||
The Constitutional Court consists of eleven judges appointed
|
||||
by the President and confirmed by Parliament. It is empowered to
|
||||
decide the constitutionality of statutes or other legal
|
||||
enactments, both of the Federation and of its subjects. As
|
||||
already noted, the Constitutional Court "participates" in the
|
||||
impeachment process. It has additional powers, including the
|
||||
right (at the request of Parliament) to give authoritative
|
||||
interpretations of the Constitution, and to determine the
|
||||
competence of the President to exercise his office.
|
||||
The Supreme Court functions as the final appeals court in
|
||||
cases of criminal, civil, or administrative law.
|
||||
Emergency Powers. The draft devotes almost three
|
||||
pages to the President's emergency powers. If the President
|
||||
declares a state of emergency, either locally or throughout the
|
||||
federation, Parliament must be notified within seventy-two hours,
|
||||
and such a declaration can remain in effect for only thirty days.
|
||||
Parliament can extend the emergency powers, but only for thirty-day periods. A state of emergency cannot be used to limit the
|
||||
powers of Parliament or the courts, and during a state of
|
||||
emergency the Constitution cannot be amended and the election
|
||||
laws cannot be changed.
|
||||
Ratification and Amendment. The constitution is to
|
||||
take effect only after ratification by a national referendum.
|
||||
Once the new constitution comes into force, the constitution of
|
||||
1978 is void. Statutes passed by the RSFSR remain in force only
|
||||
if they do not contradict the new constitution or new statutes
|
||||
passed on its authority.
|
||||
The draft provides for an amendment process which is slow and
|
||||
cumbersome. and it also lays down a rule that the "basic
|
||||
principles" of the constitution cannot be changed. First, an
|
||||
amendment must be formally proposed to the Parliament. The
|
||||
proposer can be a group consisting of one-fifth of the members of
|
||||
either house, or the President, or by one million citizens, or a
|
||||
variety of others. Six months following the formal proposal, the
|
||||
parliament can act, and the proposal needs a two-thirds vote of
|
||||
both houses. Then the amendment must be submitted to the
|
||||
subjects of the federation for ratification. The amendment is
|
||||
formally adopted if two-thirds of the subjects agree to
|
||||
ratification.
|
||||
CONCLUSION
|
||||
This working draft is more than a constitution. It is also a
|
||||
declaration of independence. The <span class="NORP">Russian</span> Federation, operating
|
||||
under this proposed constitution, would be an independent and
|
||||
sovereign state. Even if the federation chose to exercise its
|
||||
right to enter into a commonwealth, the resulting union would
|
||||
only be a loose confederation.
|
||||
The speed with which the draft was put together suggests that
|
||||
the RSFSR leadership is anxious to produce a finished
|
||||
constitution before the all-union constitutional commission
|
||||
finishes its work. However, the draft is far too long for an
|
||||
effective constitution. Large sections of the document could be
|
||||
left for enactment by the new parliament, as organic law.
|
||||
Before it finishes its work, the <span class="NORP">Russian</span> commission must
|
||||
decide what kind of presidency it wants. It ought to give
|
||||
consideration to a third model--the German model, where the
|
||||
President is only a ceremonial head of state and real executive
|
||||
power is vested in the head of government.
|
||||
NOTES
|
||||
1. Sovetskaya Rossiya, June 17, 1990.
|
||||
2. Konstitutsiya (osnovnoi zakon) Rossiiskoi federatsii.
|
||||
Proekt rabochei gruppy i gruppy ekspertov Konstitutsionnoi
|
||||
komissii RSFSR - s parallel'nymi mestami i variantami. This
|
||||
document is dated Oct. 11, 1990. Hereafter the document is
|
||||
referred to as a working draft.
|
||||
3. Sovetskaya Rossiya, June 14, 1990.
|
||||
4. Constitution of the USSR (1977), art. 76; Constitution of
|
||||
the RSFSR (1978), art. 68.
|
||||
5. The declaration in fact is not consistent with the
|
||||
republic constitution, since that constitution (art. 76) provides
|
||||
that USSR laws are binding on republic territory.
|
||||
6. Soviet criminal law presently defines the death penalty
|
||||
as an exceptional measure. Osnovy ugolovnogo zakonodatel'stva
|
||||
Soyuza SSR i soyuznykh respublik (1959), art. 22. However,
|
||||
the death penalty can be used to punish a variety of crimes --
|
||||
not only murder, serious crimes against the state, and certain
|
||||
crimes committed in wartime, but also counterfeiting, illegal
|
||||
dealing in foreign currency, bribe-taking, and aggravated rape.
|
||||
7. Art. 39 of the USSR Constitution provides that individual
|
||||
rights cannot be exercised in a way which damages the interests
|
||||
of society or the state. Articles 50 and 51 provide that the
|
||||
rights of free expression and association are granted in order to
|
||||
advance the interests of the system.
|
||||
8. Sovetskaya Rossiya, July 20, 1990.
|
||||
9. Family law is considered a separate branch of law in the
|
||||
USSR: the fundamentals are laid down in all-union legislation,
|
||||
and each republic has a code of family law. This sphere of law
|
||||
is not mentioned in the draft.
|
||||
10. Some members of the working group opposed the idea of a
|
||||
Constitutional Court, and there is a second version of this
|
||||
section which omits any mention of that court. In the second
|
||||
version, the Supreme Court rather than the Constitutional Court
|
||||
would be involved in the impeachment process.</p>
|
||||
</body>
|
||||
</html>
|
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