CARACAS, Thursday February 08, 2007 | Update
JUAN FRANCISCO ALONSO
EL UNIVERSAL
President Hugo Chávez' proposal to reform the Constitution
of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela for the purpose of
enabling the head of state to run for re-election on an indefinite
basis, ordering a political and administrative reorganization
of the country and setting a socialist socioeconomic model
has split not only politicians but also constitutional experts.
There is no consensus among them on what is the best way to
incorporate these new approaches into the text of the constitution.
Some claim that a constitutional reform is the right way
of amending the fundamental law, while others agree that only
a constituent assembly would be empowered to do so, as, in
their opinion, the proposed changes are so huge that they
entail drawing up a new constitution.
Yet, some others prefer to wait for the Presidential Committee
for Constitutional Reform to produce a final proposal so as
to assess it and give an opinion on the matter.
The Venezuelan ruler, who propounded the constitutional amendment,
falls into the first group. Although not being a lawyer, he
gave an explanation of some arguments that, as he said, some
experts in constitutional law submitted for his consideration.
During the swearing-in ceremony of the Presidential Committee
for the Constitutional Reform, Chávez disclosed the reasons
in favour of a constitutional reform. In this regard, he said:
"I am certain that a reform is the right way (to amend the
constitution), because (the primary object of) a constituent
assembly is to draw up another constitution, and we do not
need that."
In the ceremony, which was held at Teresa Carreño Theather,
downtown Caracas, he read article 342 of the Venezuelan Constitution,
which provides that "the purpose of a constitutional reform
is to effect a partial revision of this Constitution and replacement
of one or more of the provisions hereof, without modifying
the fundamental principles and structure (titles and chapters)
of the text of the Constitution."
Immediately afterwards, and making an interpretation of such
article, Chávez underscored that "the Venezuelan Constitution
establishes that a (constitutional) reform is aimed at replacing
one or several of the provisions thereof. (The fundamental
law) sets no boundaries; 'several' may be 100, 200 or all
of them, provided the structure of the constitutional text
and the fundamental principles contained in the first nine
articles are not modified (…) We are not to change any (of
these nine articles), but the remaining articles may be changed."
In an interview with El Universal newspaper, parliamentarian
and member of the Presidential Committee Carlos Escarrá
pointed out with a similar wording that "a constituent assembly
is empowered to draw up a new constitution by means of which
the State is thoroughly modified, whereas a constitutional
reform entails that the original constituent power, which
is permanent, is resorted to but not to draw up another fundamental
law."
Invoking the original power
Chávez' and Escarrá's arguments were refuted by
Constitutional Law professor José Vicente Haro, Andrés
Bello Catholic University (UCAB), by saying that "even though
the first nine articles of the constitution remain unchanged
under a constitutional reform, the fact is that the indefinite
re-election issue changes the alternativeness principle contained
in article 6," and that is in itself a modification of such
an article.
As far as constitutional lawyer Juan Manuel Raffali is concerned,
he used all but the same terms to claim that "if a single
article containing fundamental principles is subject to change,
the constitution is being changed as well." In this connection,
he went on to explain that "although you do not delete even
a single comma from the article that provides for the right
to live, but if the article providing for judicial guarantees
is changed to include death penalty, you are clearly changing
the first article without even modifying its wording."
In the meantime, Hildegard Rondón de Sansó, former
magistrate of Political Administrative Court, then Supreme
Court of Justice, said that the important thing is to determine
"whether the fundamental principles refer not only to the
contents of title one but also to the other provisions of
the constitution."
Haro also rebutted the arguments put forward by those who
claim that the alternativeness principle (contained in article
6) would suffer no changes at all even if the President is
allowed to run for re-election as many times as he wishes
because the people may always elect another candidate.
"In presidential systems like ours the principle of alternativeness
is guaranteed by putting a limit on re-election to only once,
as the person in power is always more likely to win, "he said.
As to the proposal to set a socialist economic model, he
added that such a model may undermine the pillars on which
the Republic rests. In this regard, he explained that "the
so-called 21st century socialism is inconsistent with the
1999 Constitution. The government is well aware of that and
that is why it is proposing a constitutional reform. Article
299 about the socioeconomic regime provides for a social productive
model, but not a socialist one."
No comments, for the time being
Raffali deems it premature to decide whether Chávez'
proposal has a radical impact on the text of the fundamental
law. "At this point it is hard to give a common answer because
we know but the wording of the proposals, not their contents
(…) Unless we know the draft constitutional reform we cannot
determine if the constitution has been reformed or is a new
one. The fact is that we do not face a reform, because the
extent of the proposed changes entails a major surgery."
Both Raffli and Haro reminded that the Constitutional Court,
Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ), has been entrusted with
deciding whether or not the draft the Presidential Council
-presided over by National Assembly (AN) chair Cilia Flores-
will submit is a constitutional reform.
"A (constitutional) reform is not free from a political control,
which is exercised by means of a referendum, or a judicial
one, which rests with the Constitutional Court," the UCAB
professor claimed.
Translated by Servio Viloria