1 / 24

Constitution as Catharsis Part 4 – Venezuela

Constitution as Catharsis Part 4 – Venezuela. Latin American Law. Last updated 18 Oct 10. Constitution in crisis. Dominican Republic (2002). US Constitution (1791). Cuba (1976). Mexico (1917). Puerto Rico (1952). Honduras (1982). Venezuela (1999). El Salvador (1983). Colombia

gwidon
Download Presentation

Constitution as Catharsis Part 4 – Venezuela

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Constitution as CatharsisPart 4 – Venezuela Latin American Law Last updated 18 Oct 10

  2. Constitution in crisis

  3. Dominican Republic (2002) US Constitution (1791) Cuba (1976) Mexico (1917) Puerto Rico (1952) Honduras (1982) Venezuela (1999) El Salvador (1983) Colombia (1991) Nicaragua (1987) Ecuador (1998) Costa Rica (1949) Panama (1972) Peru (1993) Brazil (1988) Bolivia (1967) Paraguay (1992) Why was the 26th constitution of Venezuela of 1961 “moribund”? Was a new constitution necessary? Julia Di Vito Chile (1980) Uruguay (1967) Argentina (1994)

  4. Venezuela (1999) Aug 25 – Constituent Assembly declares “legis emergency” Aug 23 – Supreme Court upholds “Judicial Reorg Decree” Aug 27 – Violence erupts when Congress holds session Aug 12 – Constituent Assembly declares “emergency” Aug 20 – Congressional threaten cutting govt funds Apr 25 – plebiscite to draft new constitution Aug 24 – Chief Justice Cecilia Sosa resigns Sep – CA aims at executive branch Jul 25 – FRM wins 120/131 seats Fall – Emerg Judicial Comm’n Sep 14 – Non-aggression pact Feb 2 – Chavez takes office Dec 15 – Constitution The absurdity of claiming to improve democracy by wielding authoritarian power is difficult to ignore. Lauren Connell

  5. National Constituent Assembly (Aug 1999): Judicial Reorganization Decree … while the Court violated the letter of the law in taking the case, the spirit of the law dictated that it restore the rule of law. But then in its opinion, the Court followed the letter of the law ….

  6. Sandra Day O’Connor Hugo Chavez “… the Justices of the Supreme Court do not fear an evaluation of their actions or behavior.” Venezuela Supreme Court (23 Aug 1999)

  7. Paradisi Leon: Decree is political, not subject to review by this Court. Your favorite dissenter?Julia Di Vito Rodriguez Garcia: Necessary to wait for fomral publication of Decree. Harting: Decree gives Judicial Reorganization Commission powers that belong exclusively to Supreme Court … sacred right to disagree. Grisanti: It is contradictory for Supreme Court to consent to being evaluated by Judicial Emergency Commission. Sosa: Decree undermines rule of law. Assembly arrogates to self role of “superpower.” Court renounces “case law” on Assembly powers. Rueda: There has been no legal challenge, thus Court does not have power to review Decree.

  8. Without a constitution there is simply no democracy. … The citizenry will not have the right to vote on the new constitution that the Assembly is drafting. • * * * • The Court committed suicide to avoid being murdered. See video. Cecilia SosaGomez (announcing 2004 presidential candidacy)

  9. Grade the court: Compare to the Bush “structural change of federal government” Lauren Connell

  10. Judges in Latin America … En Venezuela, desde la promulgación, en 1999, de la nueva Constitución, está prohibido al Poder Judicial exigir pago alguno por sus servicios. “One dramatic example is a judge who threw money out of her window and onto the street below when the police entered her office to arrest her for accepting a bribe.” Global Programme against Corruption? Reelection of judges in LatAm Joel De Leon

  11. Number of judges per 100,000 residents (2003)

  12. Venezuela?

  13. Constitutional comparison …

  14. US Constitution (1791) • Preamble ["We the people...."] • Art I [The Legislative Branch] • ..Sec 1. [Legislative Power Vested] • ..Sec 2. [House of Representatives] • ..Sec 3. [Senate] • ..Sec 4. [Elections of Senators, Representatives] • ..Sec 5. [Rules of House and Senate] • ..Sec 6. [Compensation and Privileges of Members] • ..Sec 7. [Passage of Bills] • ..Sec 8. [Scope of Legislative Power] • ..Sec 9. [Limits on Legislative Power] • ..Sec 10. [Limits on States] • Art II [The Presidency] • ..Sec 1. [Election, Installation, Removal] • ..Sec 2. [Presidential Power] • ..Sec 3. [State of the Union, Receive Ambassadors, Laws Faithfully Executed, Commission Officers] • ..Sec 4. [Impeachment] • Art III [The Judiciary] • ..Sec 1. [Judicial Power Vested] • ..Sec 2. [Scope of Judicial Power] • ..Sec 3. [Treason] • Art IV [The States] • ..Sec 1. [Full Faith and Credit] • ..Sec 2. [Privileges and Immunities, Extradiction, Fugitive Slaves] • ..Sec 3. [Admission of States] • ..Sec 4. [Guarantees to States] • Art V [The Amendment Process] • Art VI [Legal Status of the Constitution] • Art VII [Ratification] • Amendments (27 in 216 years – 1.3/decade) Political Spoils Bolivarian Constitution (1999) Title I:     FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES  Title II:     GEOGRAPHICAL SPACES AND POLITICAL DIVISION Title III:    DUTIES, HUMAN RIGHTS AND GUARANTEES Title IV:    PUBLIC POWER Title V:      ORGANIZATION OF NATIONAL PUBLIC AUTHORITY Title VI:     SOCIOECONOMIC SYSTEM Title VII:    NATIONAL SECURITY Title VIII:   PROTECTION OF THE CONSTITUTION Title IX:      CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS New constitutions (27 in 196 years – 1.4/decade) Electoral and Citizen Branches Alonzo Chisolm

  15. Article 336 dictates the specific powers of the Supreme Court: • To declare the nullity, in whole or in part, of national laws and other acts of National Assembly with the force of law, which are in conflict with this Constitution. • To declare the nullity, in whole or in part, of state Constitutions and laws, municipal ordinances and other acts of the deliberating bodies of the States and Municipalities which are issued by way of direct and immediate implementation of the Constitution and are in conflict with the same. • To declare the nullity, in whole or in part, of acts of the National Executive with the force of law, which are in conflict with this Constitution. • To declare the nullity, in whole or in part, of acts issued by way of direct and immediate implementation of the Constitution by any other government organ exercising Public Power. • To verify, at the request of the President of the Republic or the National Assembly, the constitutionality of international treaties signed by the Republic, prior to ratification of the same. • To review in all cases, even ex officio, the constitutionality of decree of the President of the Republic decreeing states of exception.

  16. … the people are willing to look the other way when the constitution is abused, if it concerns something that they really care about – in this case, their safety. [What country is student talking about?]

  17. Chavez’s Venezuela …

  18. Chávez administration: • government social spending increased significantly • increased access to health care, subsidized food, education • health care: 1,628 primary care physicians in 1998 for a population of 23.4 million and today 19,571 for a population of 27 million • poverty rate in Venezuela decreased from 43.9% in 1999 to 27.5% in 2007 • unemployment rate dropped to about 9% in 2007, lowest level in more than a decade

  19. Title VIII, entitled The Protection of the Constitution, declares that the document will remain in force even if it is displaced completely. It imposes on the citizens a “duty to help reestablish the Constitution’s effective validity.” Chavez fears? Chavez placed the speed of reform ahead of its constitutionality (compare to Obama’s “change” agenda). 2009 amendment to Article 230. Lauren Connell

  20. Artículo 236. Son atribuciones y obligaciones del Presidente o Presidenta de la República: … 7. Declarar los estados de excepción y decretar la restricción de garantías en los casos previstos en esta Constitución. The Bolivarian revolution Joel De Leon

  21. End

  22. Comparison Fedecámaras U.S. Chamber of Commerce Ben Austrin-WIllis

  23. … The Supreme Court held constitutional the government’s seizure of a private television station and use of its equipment and broadcast channel to project a new channel, Venezuelan Social Television Joe Adams … Out of the thirty-two justices total, ten are women; this makes for 31% female representation on the highest court. [None in Electoral Chamber; six of ten in Criminal Appeals Chamber] Jill Reeder

  24. La ruana … Los chalchaleros

More Related