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Allemagne
- Germany
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The Constitution of the German Federation of August 11, 1919
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| The defeat of Imperial Germany by the U.S. and Allied states
in 1918 offered the opportunity for the complete recasting of German government
through the election of a parliament constituted on the basis of democracy
and elected under universal suffrage by the German people. Thus a new German
National Assembly met in the town of Weimar in February 1919 and the post-war
German state acquired its first democratic constitution six months later.
It was a federal constitution for the German confederacy of seventeen states
large and small comprising some 62 million Germans (1925 census). The democratic intent is clearly evident, though it must be said that rights and duties inscribed on paper do not always hold out against the intrusions of economic crises and ideological rifts. And such was the case in Weimar Germany as political extremism and economic collapse helped pave the way for the destruction of the 1919 constitution under the hammer blows of Nazism in 1933. |
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PART I - Structure and Tasks of the Federation Section I. The Federation and the States Art. 1. The German Federation is a republic. Supreme power emanates from the people. Art. 4. The rules of international law, universally recognized, are deemed to form part of German federal law and, as such, have obligatory force. Art. 9. In so far as there is need for uniform regulation, the
Federation may legislate upon all matters concerning Art. 10. General principles may be laid down by federal legislation
concerning the following subjects, viz. Art. 12. So long and so far as the Federation has not exercised its legislative powers, the states continue free to legislate. This does not, however, hold good of subjects as to which the federation has sole power to legislate . . . Art. 13. Federal law overrides state law. . . . Art. 14. The federal laws are executed by the authorities of the states, in so far as federal laws do not otherwise provide. Art. 15. . . .The state governments are bound at the request of the federal government to remedy defects discovered in the execution of federal laws. . . Art. 17. Every state must have a republican constitution. The representatives of the people must be elected by the universal, equal, direct and secret suffrage of all German subjects, men and women. Each state government requires the confidence of the state parliament . . . Section II. The Reichstag Art. 20. . . . The deputies are , each of them, representative of the whole people. They are subject to their conscience alone and are not bound by instructions. Art. 22. The representatives are elected by the universal, equal, direct, and secret suffrage of all men and women over twenty years of age in accordance with the principle of proportional representation. . . . Art. 23. The Reichstag is elected for four years. . . Art. 25. The President of the Federation may dissolve the Reichstag,
but only once for any one cause.
Art. 41. The President of the Federation is elected by the whole German people. Every German who has completed his thirty-fifth year is eligible. . . . Art. 42. When entering upon his office, the President . . takes
the following oath before the Reichstag, Art. 43. The President . . remains in office for seven years. Re-election is permitted. Art. 47. The President . . has supreme command over the whole of the defense force of the federation. Art. 48. If a state fails to perform the duties imposed upon it
by the federal constitution or by federal law, the President . . may enforce
performance with the aid of the armed forces. Art. 50. All orders and decrees of the President . . , including those relating to the defense force, in order to be valid, must be countersigned by the Federal Chancellor or by the competent Federal Minister. . . Art. 53. The President . . appoints and dismisses the Federal Chancellor and, on the latter's recommendation, the Federal Ministers. Art. 54. The Federal Chancellor and the Federal Ministers require the confidence of the Reichstag for the exercise of their offices. Any one of them must resign if the Reichstag withdraws its confidence from him by an express resolution. Art. 56. The Federal Chancellor settles the political program, for which he is responsible to the Reichstag . . . Section IV. The Reichsrat Art. 60. A Reichsrat [upper house] will be formed for the representation of the German states in federal legislation and administration. Art. 61. In the Reichsrat each state has at least one vote. In
the case of the larger states one vote will be assigned for every 700,000
inhabitants . . . No single state may be represented by more than two-fifths
of the total number of votes. Section V. Federal Legislation Art. 68. Bills may be introduced by the Federal Government or
may originate in the midst of the Reichstag itself. Art. 70. The President . . must authenticate all laws constitutionally enacted . . . Art. 73. A law passed by the Reichstag shall, before its promulgation,
be submitted to the popular vote if the President . . so decides within
one month. Art. 74. The Reichsrat may protest against laws passed by the
Reichstag. . . Art. 76. The constitution can be amended by legislation. However, resolutions of the Reichstag in favor of an amendment of the constitution are effective only if two-thirds of those present consent thereto . . . Section VII. Administration of Justice Art. 102. Judges are independent and subject to the law only. Art. 105. Exceptional courts [i.e., those not established according to legal administrative procedures] are forbidden. No one may be withdrawn from his lawful judge. . . Military courts of honor are abolished. PART II - FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF GERMANS Section. I. The Individual Art. 109. All Germans are equal before the law. . . Titles of nobility . . may no longer be conferred. Art. 114. Personal freedom is inviolable. No restraint or deprivation of personal liberty by the public power is admissible, unless authorized by law. . . . Art. 115. The residence of every German is a sanctuary for him and inviolable. Exceptions are admitted in virtue of the law only. Art. 116. No one may be punished for an act unless such act was legally punishable at the time when it was committed. Art. 117. The secrecy of correspondence, as well as the secrecy of postal, telegraphic and telephonic communications is inviolable. Exceptions may be admitted by federal law only. Art. 118. Every German is entitled within the limits of the general
law freely to express his opinions by word of mouth, writing, printing,
pictorial representation, or otherwise. . . Section II. Social Life Art. 121. By legislation illegitimate children are to be offered the same opportunities for their physical, mental and social development as legitimate children. Art. 124. All Germans have the right to form societies or associations for any object that does not run counter to the criminal law . . . The same provisions apply to religious societies and bodies. . . Art. 125. Freedom of elections and secret voting are guaranteed . . . Section III. Religion and Religious Bodies Art. 135. All inhabitants of the Federation enjoy full liberty of faith and of conscience . . . . . Art. 137. There is no State Church. . . . Section IV. Education and Schools Art. 144. The whole of the educational system is under the supervision of the state; the latter can assign a share in this task to the local communities . . . Art. 145. School attendance is compulsory . . . up to the completion of the eighteenth year. Instruction and the accessories thereto are gratuitous in elementary and continuation [i.e., high] schools. Art. 148. In every school the educational aims must be moral training, public spirit, personal and vocational fitness, and, above all, the cultivation of German national character and of the spirit of international reconciliation. Section V. Economic Life Art. 151. The organization of economic life must accord with the principles of justice and aim at securing for all conditions of existence worthy of human beings. Within these limits the individual is to be secured the enjoyment of economic freedom. . . . Art. 159. Freedom to combine for the protection and betterment of their conditions of labor . . is guaranteed to all and in all occupations |
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