Constitution of Costa Rica

The Constitution of Costa Rica is the supreme law of Costa Rica. At the end of the 1948 Costa Rican Civil War, José Figueres Ferrer oversaw the Costa Rican Constitutional Assembly, which drafted the document. It was approved on 1949 November 7. Several older constitutions had been in effect starting from 1812, with the most recent former constitution ratified in 1871. The Costa Rican Constitution is remarkable in that in its Article 12 abolished the Costa Rican military, making it the second nation after Japan to do so by law. Another unusual clause is an amendment asserting the right to live in a healthy natural environment.

Constitution of Costa Rica
JurisdictionRepublic of Costa Rica
Created7 November 1949
SystemPresidential unitary republic
Branches4
ChambersUnicameral
ExecutivePresident
JudiciarySupreme and Electoral
First legislature8 November 1949
First executive8 November 1949
Amendments17
Last amended2015
LocationNational Museum of Costa Rica
Commissioned byGoverning Junta
Author(s)Constituent Assembly of Costa Rica
SignatoriesAll 45 deputies
SupersedesCosta Rican Constitution of 1871

History

First years of independence

Pact of Concord

The first Constitution ever to be implemented in the Costa Rican territory was the Cadiz Constitution or Spanish Constitution of 1812, which was in place between 1812 and 1814 and then again between 1820 and 1821, however soon after the Independence of Central America the Cadiz Constitution remained by decree of the Towns’ Legates Junta which took over power as an interim government in the meantime a new constitutional text was drafted.[1][2]

The Towns’ Legates Junta (or Junta de Legados de los Pueblos) sanctioned the Interim Fundamental Social Pact or Pact of Concord, Costa Rica's first Constitution on December 1, 1821. This Constitution was in force until 1823.[1]

The Provincial Constituent Congress of Costa Rica was convened twice in the then Province of Costa Rica immediately after the independence of Spain. First with the country as a province, at least nominally, part of the First Mexican Empire, and the second as a province of the newly created Federal Republic of Central America. In both cases, it issued legal statutes that acted as provisional local constitutions.[3]

The First Provincial Constituent Congress was convened after the elections of deputies who would represent Costa Rica in the Constituent Congress of Mexico in 1822, but who never held office because it was dissolved by the Emperor Agustín de Iturbide.[3] The Junta Gubernativa decides then to convene a constituent congress to decide the fate of the country divided between republicans willing to succeed and imperialists loyal to Mexico, and this congress issued the First Political Statute of the Province of Costa Rica on March 19, 1823.[3] Which was in force until the outbreak of civil war between monarchists and republicans of that year.[3] After the war, when the Mexican Empire had fallen and Central America had become the United Provinces, another Provincial Congress was convened again by the interim president and leader of the winning Republican side Gregorio José Ramírez, who handed over the power to said body which held it between April 16 and on May 10, 1823.[2] This Congress ratified the power of Ramírez, defined the capital of San José and issued the Second Political Statute of the Province of Costa Rica that temporarily served as a constitution within the Federation of Central America.[3]

Federal Republic of Central America

From May to November of 1824 the Basis of the Federal Constitution was in place in all the Central American countries as part of the Federation: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, as a temporary constitution in the meantime the Central American Federal Constituent Assembly drafted the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Central America which was enacted on November 22, 1824 and was in place until the Federation's dissolution in 1838.[4]

State of Costa Rica

Still as part of the Federal Republic the then State of Costa Rica promulgates the Fundamental Law of the State of Costa Rica on January 25, 1825 by the Constituent Congress of the State of Costa Rica during the presidency of Juan Rafael Mora Porras and heavily influenced by the Cadiz Constitution.[1] This Constitution will be in place until Costa Rica's departure from the Federal Republic in 1939. On March 8, 1841 then dictator Braulio Carrillo Colina enacted the Decree of Basis and Guarantees, which worked as de facto Constitution on his regime.[1] and was pretty authoritarian in nature.[1] Carrillo was toppled in April of 1842 due to the invasion of Honduran general Francisco Morazán. Morazán abolished the Decree on June 6, 1842 and this was confirmed by the Constituent Assembly instituted by him on August 24, 1842.

Constituent Assemblies from 1838 to 1870

1847 Constitution

From 1838 to 1870, a large number of Constituent Assemblies with a greater or lesser degree of effectiveness, independence or legislative power were raised.[5] As is the custom in Costa Rica, after a rupture of the constitutional order that defenestrates a government, a Constituent Assembly was convened. It legitimized the new government (a custom that was maintained in 1871, 1917 and 1949). During the very unstable second half of the nineteenth century in which there were many coups d'état, the Constitutions proliferated as much as the coups, as well as their Assemblies.[5]

Braulio Carrillo assumes power in Costa Rica as a dictator in 1838 and calls a Constituent Assembly that is suspended indefinitely. Carrillo issues by decree the Law of Bases and Guarantees that operates as a de facto Constitution.[5]

In April 1842 General Francisco Morazán took power in Costa Rica by overthrowing Carrillo and calling a Constituent Assembly in June. This would also have legislative powers, even though they are not specific to a Constituent Power.[5]

Ousted Morazán and elected interim president José María Alfaro, on April 5, 1843, he convened a Constituent Assembly that was officially established on June 1.[5] This Constituent Assembly would be the second last to assume legislative powers, although it was mostly reduced to ratification of Alfaro's decrees.[5] He drafted the Constitution of 1844, which would leave unhappy the military hierarchy that would overthrow the then ruler, Antonio Pinto Soares who would return power to Alfaro on June 7, 1846.[5]

He reconvenes a Constituent Assembly that would function until 1847, issuing the Constitution of that year. Which would be reformed, again via Constituent, in 1848.[5]

1869 Constitution

Being president José María Montealegre Fernández operated a Constituent Assembly from October 16 to December 26, 1859, which drafted the respective Constitution.[5] The provisional governor José María Montealegre Fernández was elected as constitutional President for the period 1860-1863. For the triennium 1863-1866, Jesús Jiménez Zamora was elected, and within a few months of being in power he dissolved the Congress, although elections were quickly called to appoint a new one. Jimenez's successor was José María Castro Madriz, elected to the period 1866-1869; but Castro's desire to be succeeded by his Secretary of State Julián Volio Llorente provoked great opposition in certain political and military circles. On November 1, 1868, a military coup overthrew the government and broke the constitutional order again. The part of the Constitution of 1859 referred to the Executive Branch was again in effect for a brief period, from August to October 1870

In 1868, Jesús Jiménez Zamora overthrew José María Castro Madriz, convoking a constituent on November 15 of that year and legislating by decree authoritatively. The Assembly begins functions on January 1, 1869 and based on the Constitution of 1859, would issue on 18 February the Constitution of 1869, which would have an ephemeral duration then, overthrown Jiménez by Tomás Guardia and elected provisional president Bruno Carranza, he convenes a constituent in 1870 that accepts the resignation.[5] The differences between this Assembly and the de facto president Tomás Guardia lead to the abolition of this by Guardia and the convening of a new Assembly in 1871 that drafted the Constitution of that year and the one with the longest duration in history, as it would last (except brief interruptions) until 1949.[5]

National Constituent Assembly of 1871

The National Constituent Assembly of 1871 was convoked by the de facto Costa Rican President Tomás Guardia Gutiérrez after annulling the previous Assembly established in May 1870 by his predecessor and political rival Bruno Carranza Ramírez.[6] Guardia called for new elections that selected a total of twenty constituent deputies who drafted the Political Constitution of 1870 strongly influenced by liberal ideas.[7] This Constitution would be the longest lasting in Costa Rican history and would be taken as a basis by the constituents of 1949 to draft the respective Constitution.[7]

1871 Constitution

National Constituent Assembly of 1917

The National Constituent Assembly of 1917 was convoked by the de facto Costa Rican President Federico Alberto Tinoco Granados after gaining power in the 1917 coup d'état in Costa Rica that overthrew Alfredo González Flores.[7] Tinoco sought to legitimize his regime by creating a new model of republic, so the Constitution of 1871 was abolished. The Assembly began sessions on April 11 and ended on June 8. One of its first decisions was to declare Tinoco the legitimate president of Costa Rica and extend its mandate to six years.[8] It was constituted by 42 deputies who were Elected in a rather questionable election where the opposition could not participate. All, except two deputies, belonged to the single party of the regime; the Peliquista Party. Only the deputies Otilio Ulate Blanco and Otto Cortés Fernández had been elected by the "Tinoquista Party".[8]

A commission of former presidents was chosen to draft the 1917 Constitution, and it is considered one of the most reformist in history, although it had a very short life. Among other things, it postulated the duty of the State to protect the working class and created a bicameral Parliament with a Senate and a Chamber of Deputies.[7] It also endowed the population with a large number of civil rights, although more so in the theory that in practice, the Tinoquista regime was exceptionally repressive. In any case, after the overthrow of Tinoco in 1919, the Constitution of 1917 was abolished and restored from that of 1871, it would not be until 1949 that a new Constituent Assembly would be convened. that would create another Constitution that would replace, to date, that of 1871.[7]

Current

The junta led by José Figueres Ferrer took office in Costa Rica on 1948 May 8 under the name of the Founding Junta of the Second Republic, and the same day provisionally reinstated the validity of the national chapters, individual and social rights of the 1871 Constitution. On 1948 September 3, the Junta called for elections for a Constituent Assembly, which opened on 1949 January 15. This Assembly recognized the verified presidential election in favor of Otilio Ulate Blanco and provided that he exercised the presidency from 1949 to 1953.

The Junta appointed a committee of jurists to prepare a draft Constitution. The Constituent Assembly rejected their draft and instead took as a basis for discussion the Constitution of 1871, although in the course of the revisions they admitted some elements of it. On 1949 November 7, the Assembly approved the new constitution, which is currently in force.

1949 publication

Summary

In its original wording had 199 articles distributed in eighteen titles and 19 transitory articles.

Title 1

Declares that the Republic is free and independent, it proclaims that sovereignty resides in the nation, setting the limits of Costa Rican territory and consecrates its sovereignty over the airspace above its territory, territorial waters and constitutional platform. It provides that the government is popular, representative, alternative and responsible and is exercised by the legislative, executive, and judicial branches. It provides that provisions contrary to the Constitution are null and that the Supreme Court can declare the laws and executive decrees unconstitutional. The army as a permanent institution is abolished.

Title II

Regulates the condition of Costa Rican by birth or by naturalization.

Title III

Regulates the situation of foreigners who have the same rights and duties as Costa Ricans, with the exceptions set by the Constitution and laws.

Title IV

Contains the enunciation of the rights and individual guarantees, including privacy, habeas corpus and the establishment of administrative courts .

Title V

Refers to the Social Guarantees. It places high importance on family values. It establishes the rights of workers and trade unions.

Title VI

On the Religion, reproduces unchanged the text of the constitutional reform of 1882 on the subject, noting that the Catholic Church is the state religion and that it contributes to its maintenance, without impeding the exercise of any other worship it is not opposed to universal morality or good customs.

Title VII

Is devoted to education and culture. In addition to enshrining compulsory primary education, it states that the preschool and high school are free. Freedom of private education is guaranteed and introduced various provisions regarding the University of Costa Rica, the freedom of teaching in higher education and various cultural aims of the Republic.

Title VIII

Deals with the political rights and duties. The established universal suffrage and direct right of Costa Ricans of either sex and a Supreme Electoral Tribunal was established to organize and conduct the elections, declaring the result of the elections and perform other functions related to the vote. Under his dependence is a Civil Registry. Members of the Court are elected for six years by the Supreme Court by a vote of not less than two thirds of votes of all judges and must meet the requirements for these.

Title IX - The Legislative Branch

Regulates the Legislative Branch, which holds one house called the Legislative Assembly integrated by 45 Deputies to homeowners and less 15 alternates. Deputies are elected for four years and may be reappointed successively. The Legislature lost some of their traditional, such as those relating to the election authority, but took others, including those to question and give vote of confidence to the Ministers and appoint investigating committees. Its regular sessions were expanded considerably. The Executive may veto a bill to consider it inconvenient or unconstitutional and in the latter case the Supreme Court decides the matter. The Assembly is obliged to consult the Supreme Court, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal and other institutions in the bills relating to them and in some cases requires a qualified majority deviate from their approach.

Title X - The Executive Branch

Concerns the executive branch exercising the President of the Republic and the Cabinet Ministers, as they subordinate collaborators and are freely appointed and removed by him. President's period of four years and a former President can not be elected again to eight years after completion of his previous period. There are two Vice Presidents of the Republic, who is popularly elected at the same time that the President and replace him in his temporary or permanent absence. The Governing Council composed of the President and the Ministers and has specific functions, such as exercising the right of pardon and appoint and dismiss diplomatic representatives.

Title XI - The Judiciary

Regulates the judiciary. The Supreme Court justices are appointed by the Legislature for periods of eight years and reelected automatically for equal periods unless otherwise decided by two thirds of Deputies. For the performance of the judiciary is required by law degree and have served the profession for ten years at least.

Title XII

Refers to the municipal system. It keeps the division into provinces, cantons and districts. In each canton there is a Municipality, popularly elected every four years. Municipal corporations are autonomous.

Title XIII

Deals with the Treasury and regulates the issuance and execution of budgets and functions of the Comptroller General of the Republic and the National Treasury.

Title XIV

Regulates the independent institutions that are independent in governance and administration. These include state banks, insurance institutions estatatales and new bodies set up by the Legislative Assembly by vote of at least two thirds of its members.

Title XV and XVI

Regulates the civil service and the oath that all civil servants must observe (to defend the Constitution and laws).

Title XVI

Refers to the constitutional review. A project that will partially reform the Constitution should be presented in regular session at least ten deputies. The project requires approval by two-thirds vote of the Assembly and then passed to the Executive. President returns with his observations along with their annual Legislature at its next regular meeting message. The Assembly must pass the amendment by a two-thirds vote of all its members again. The general reform of the Constitution can only be made by a Constituent Assembly convened for that purpose, after complying with the formalities of partial reform.

Title XVIII

The title refers to the authority of the Constitution and includes transitory articles.

Reforms since 1949

1977 publication

The 1949 Constitution has been in force for a considerable period and has been the subject of numerous partial reforms. Among the most important reforms include:

  • 1954, which increased the number of judges of the Supreme Court .
  • 1957, which assigned to the Judiciary sum not less than 6% of the national budget.
  • 1958, which removed the gratuity of municipal offices.
  • 1959, which established the State's obligation to enroll citizens in the Civil Registry and provide them with identity cards.
  • 1961, which set to fifty-seven the number of Deputies, suppressed the institution of alternate Deputies and established universal social insurance.
  • 1968, which led to treaties ranking higher than laws, prohibited discrimination contrary to human dignity, abolished the independence of the autonomous institutions in government and arranged for the convening of a constituent to the overall reform of the Constitution only requires the approval of two thirds of votes of all Deputies.
  • 1969, which absolutely prohibited presidential reelection.
  • 1971, which lowered the age requirement for civic duties to eighteen years.
  • 1971 and 1972, to protect public employees' salaries from being used to pay political debts.
  • 1975, which clarified the independence of the branches of government, abolished the ban on forming parties opposed to the democratic system, gave Spanish as an official language of the Republic, allowed the President to travel to other Panama or Central American countries without legislative authorization, set at 12 miles territorial waters and established a zone of territorial waters 200.
  • 1984, which abolished the principle that wage increases of Deputies could only govern until after they have ceased to function those who approved.
  • 1989, which established the constitutional jurisdiction and attributed to a specialized chamber of the Supreme Court the resolution of constitutionality conflicts.
  • 1993, which allowed the existence of standing committees with legislative powers.
  • 1994, which established the right to a healthy and ecologically balanced environment.
  • 1995, which stated that the quality of Costa Rican (citizenship) is not lost and can not be waived.
  • 2003 reform of the constitution of 1969 is deleted and will return to the presidential reelection.

Proposed new Constitution

Proposals to convene a new Constituent Assembly in Costa Rica to draft a new Political Constitution have been circulating for several years. In 2016, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal authorized the collection of signatures to submit to a referendum the bill that would call a Constituent,[9] although the process was held back by the filing of an amparo appeal before the Constitutional Chamber.[10]

During the Óscar Arias Sánchez administration, the then Minister of the Presidency, his brother Rodrigo Arias, publicly declared that the government was interested in convening a new Constituent Assembly to draft a new Constitution that would reform the State by providing what it qualified as governability. For which it would require the approval of a bill that should have the backing of qualified majority in the Legislative Assembly (38 deputies) and does not require a presidential signature, or via referendum. Arias mentioned to La Nación newspaper in December 2008 the interest of calling a referendum for that purpose and then holding the elections of constituent deputies.[11] However at the end of the Arias administration, such a project was not presented. Other political figures have expressed their support for the convening of a new Constituent Assembly, including the former liberationist candidate Antonio Álvarez Desanti,[12] the mayor of San José Johnny Araya[13] and the former minister, ex-deputy and former president of the National Liberation Party Francisco Antonio Pacheco.[14] In 2016, the New Constitution for Costa Rica Movement was founded by different figures, among them the former liberationists Maureem Clarke, Walter Coto and Álex Solís, the former ambassador to Venezuela and historian Vladimir de la Cruz, the academic Francisco Barahona and the former libertarian deputy Patricia Pérez.[15][16]

De la Cruz was also a member of the Board of Notables for State Reform, convened by then President Laura Chinchilla and who made several suggestions for state reform. Some of the suggested changes to the constitutional body include:[15]

  • Consecutive re-election once for the president.
  • Permanent indefinite re-election for deputies (parliamentary career).
  • Election of the judges of the Supreme Court independently and not appointed by the Legislative Assembly.
  • Increase in the number of deputies to 80.
  • Power to the Parliament to apply the vote of no confidence to the Executive in such a way that both presidential and parliamentary elections are held.

On February 16, 2016, representatives of the New Constitution Movement presented a project for the convocation of a new Constituent Assembly.[17]

According to the original text, the Assembly would consist of 45 members, with an equal number of men and women, elected by closed lists of 27 nationals and 18 provincials to be installed on November 7, 2019 and extend for 20 months and draft a Constitution that is in effect by September 15, 2021. They also asked the Supreme Electoral Tribunal for authorization to convene the referendum initiative, however, the Court's decision was to reject the convocation1 when finding constitutional frictions with the proposal for three main reasons:[18][19]

  • Limits the actions of the constituents to establish that they can not legislate on certain aspects (the original draft stated that certain chapters of the Constitution would be excluded from the discussion), according to the Court's criterion the Constituent Power is absolute and does not allow limits to the actions of the constituents.
  • It proposes allowing independent and non-partisan candidacies, something that the current constitution of Costa Rica does not allow since the original text proposed allowing cooperatives, business chambers, unions and professional associations to run candidates as well as citizens without a party. According to the Court, the current Constitution allows only political parties to nominate candidates and any reform has to work under the rules set by the Constitution in place.
  • It does not contemplate submitting the constitutional body emanating from the Constituent Assembly to a referendum.

A second version with the objections observed was subsequently presented before the Electoral Tribunal. Now it contemplated 61 deputies, half men and women, and a period of 15 months to discuss the new constitution so that it could enter into force on September 15, 2021.[20] On this occasion, the magistrates approved allowing the collection of signatures. According to the Costa Rican referendum regulation law, the promoters should collect at least 5% of the signatures of the registry, that is, some 167,000 signatures that by law must be collected within a period of nine months.[21] If the signatures are obtained and after the Civil Registry certifies that all are genuine, the referendum would have been held on the first Sunday of July 2019.

However, scholar and researcher at the University of Costa Rica Esperanza Tasies filed a writ of amparo against the ruling of the TSE on Thursday, February 16, 2017.[22]

According to Tasies, the current Constitution only allows for partial reforms of the Constitution, making use of the referendum and not a total reform, which can only be called by legislative act, and also argues that the bill is contradictory because if the referendums on "budgetary, tax, fiscal, monetary, credit, pension, security, approval of loans and contracts or acts of an administrative nature" are not allowed, the reform of the Constitution would address these issues.

Chamber IV of the Supreme Court of Justice sustained Tasies' allegations and declared the proposed referendum unconstitutional, declaring that only the Parliament can convene a Constitutional Assembly.[23][24]

References

  1. Aguilar B., Aguilar Óscar (1974). La Constitución de 1949. Antecedentes y proyecciones. San José, Costa Rica: Editorial Costa Rica.
  2. "Antecedentes del Estado de Costa Rica". Mensajes presidenciales.
  3. Aguilar Bulgarelli, Óscar (1974). La Constitución de 1949. Antecedentes y proyecciones. San José, Costa Rica: Editorial Costa Rica.
  4. GARCIA LAGUARDIA, Jorge Mario., El Federalismo en Centroamérica. Integración y Desintegración, disponible en: http://biblio.juridicas.unam.mx/libros/4/1640/10.pdf
  5. Castro Vega, Oscar (2003). Rodrigo Facio en la constituyente de 1949. EUNED. ISBN 9789968312776.
  6. Vargas González, Hugo (2005). El sistema electoral en Costa Rica durante el siglo XIX. ISBN 9789977679464.
  7. Arce Goméz, Celín (May–August 2011). "Notas sobre la Asamblea Nacional Constituyente de 1949". Revista de Ciencias Jurídicas. 125: 31–78.
  8. Rodríguez Vega, Eugenio (2004). Costa Rica en el siglo veinte. EUNED. ISBN 9789968313834.
  9. Madrigal, Luis. "TSE autoriza recolectar firmas para convocar a referéndum sobre la Asamblea Constituyente". Mundo. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  10. Oviedo, Esteban. "Sala IV suspende recolección de firmas sobre referendo para una Asamblea Constituyente". La Nación. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  11. Rivera, Ernesto (1 December 2008). "Rodrigo Arias aboga por convocar Asamblea Nacional Constituyente". La Nación.
  12. Álvarez Desanti, Antonio. "La necesidad o no de convocar a una Asamblea Constituyente". Archived from the original on 30 May 2015.
  13. "Conferencia sobre la Constituyente, Municipalidad de San José".
  14. "Francisco Antonio Pacheco - Constituyente".
  15. Arrieta, Esteban (24 July 2018). "Crisis en Corte revive idea de una nueva Constitución". La República. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  16. Solano, Jacqueline (13 February 2017). "A la Constitución ya se le han hecho muchos parches". Diario Extra. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  17. Arrieta Pérez, Carlos (16 February 2016). "Presentan proyecto para crear nueva Constitución Política". El País. Retrieved 17 February 2016.
  18. Oviedo, Esteban (14 September 2016). "TSE rechaza referendo sobre una Asamblea Constituyente". La Nación. Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  19. Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones. "Resolucion 6187-E9-2016". Retrieved 15 September 2016.
  20. Madrigal, Luis (30 September 2016). "TSE da curso a nueva solicitud para convocar a una Asamblea Nacional Constituyente". Mundo. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  21. Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones. "Ley n.° 8492" (PDF). Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  22. Tasies, Esperanza. ""Acción De Inconstitucional Referendum Constituyente". Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  23. Cambronero, Natasha (12 June 2017). "TSE congela trámites que buscaban convocar referendo sobre Asamblea Constituyente". Nación. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  24. Solano, Jacqueline (7 June 2017). "Nos duele que intenten evitar Asamblea Constituyente". Diario Extra. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
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