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Constitutional Reforms Over time and beginning with its first constitution of November 6, 1844, our country has undergone 37 constitutional reforms: the most recent took effect on July 25, 2002. In the majority of cases, events have determined the reforms: political crises, governmental transitions, plans of an authoritarian power, etcetera. Generally, these reforms were not a true fracture in the engineering
and soul of the 1844 text. The many sources that inspired the document demonstrate
the desire and aspiration of the first writers of our constitutions to take
from the period's most important currents of political and constitutional thought. Reform initiative Article 116 states that a reform proposal can only be presented to the National Congress by 1/3 of its members from one chamber or another or the Executive Power. The initiative for a reform or revision law, when it is exercised by the legislators, supposes the support of at least 11 senators or 50 representatives, depending on the House where the initiative began. This is the only case of collective, not individual, legislative initiative foreseen in our Constitution, with the exception of the principle established in Article 38 that confers the collective initiative to each senator and each representative on an individual and personal level. When the Executive Power exercises its ability to reform, it is not subjected to any conditions of form, only that it should be in keeping with the demands and processes of a draft of a normal law. This does not prevent the reform Project from the possibility of resulting from a consultation with civil society or the work of jurors especially designated for this work. Constitutional reform law The need for reform is declared by law. The National Assembly arranges the meeting, determining the object of the reform and indicating the articles of the Constitution to be discussed. To approve this law, the same process is used as for ordinary laws, which signifies that a majority is not required, unless a declaration of urgency is made, or rather the draft reform should be approved by an absolute majority of votes in each chamber; and if the issue has been previously declared urgent, 2/3 of the votes in each chamber are required for its second discussion. The law that states the need for reform can be declared unconstitutional if the constitutional processes have not been respected. In this vein, our Supreme Court of Justice, in a sentence announced on January 3, 2002, established the following: "the aforementioned law that declared the need for the reform is a juridical norm of an adjective character, susceptible to attack by a direct action of unconstitutionality, which defers to the rest of the laws decided by the National Congress, in which it should be proposed with the support of a third of the members of one and another House, or submitted by the Executive Power, and which is not observed in this proposal." Equally, it can be inferred that neither could the reform law include article 119 in its articles to be reformed. The Supreme Count, in its September 1, 1995, No. 1 decision, indicated "that the only reform of the Constitution which said law could not reform is that which refers to the form of government " Character of reform law As the respected Profesor Manuel Amiama tells us, "The law that proposes a constitutional reform has a sui generis character in various senses". Our great teacher of public law states this for the following reasons: Structure of the reforming body The constitutional reform can be effected by: It should be highlighted that of the 37 constitutional reforms recorded in the country, 20 have been effected by popularly elected representatives, the last in 1963. In our opinion, a mixed reform system should be adopted, through which the partial or limited reform of the Constitution is conferred upon the National Assembly, and in the case of general or total reform, the same would correspond to a constitutional assembly, in the logic of the Dominican constitutional tradition. Powers of the reforming body The National Assembly has a double juridical limitation on reforming what has already been established in the current Constitution: Regarding these limitations, we should have the following considerations: Knowledge of a reform Project The National Assembly will meet within 15 days following the publication of the law that declares the need for reform. In the absence of constitutional procedures for recognizing the reform, the National Assembly can create an ad-hoc or special committee to supply the plenary with a report and it can adopt the internal rules of procedure of one of the chambers for its work. Quorum for the deliberation of the National Assembly will be composed of more than half of the members of each Chamber. Minimum quorum: 17 Senators and 76 Representatives. The decisions will be made by the two-thirds majority of the votes, irrespective of Chamber origin. In the case of full attendance of the vote, the 2/3 majority would be the following: 32+150 = 182 x 2/3 = 121 legislators. After voting and announcing the results, the Constitution will be published with the reformed articles integrated therein. Constitutional reforms of the Republic in the 20th and 21st centuries Excerpt of a text of Dr. Milton Ray Guevara . ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
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