Showing posts with label Constitutional amendment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Constitutional amendment. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Unamendability Preserved in Slovakia, but only as a Last Resort

On January 30, 2019, the Slovak Constitutional Court invalidated a constitutional amendment for breaking the implicit material core of the Constitution. It was a historic first not only for Slovakia but also for the broader region because no other European court had previously founded the doctrine of unconstitutional constitutional amendment without textual support in the constitution. This is a critical distinction, because the stickiness of the unamendability doctrine, or any new doctrinal development, depends on domestic normative sources justifying such a development as well as the power of the court, its popular support and the acquiescence of the losing party (often the legislature or executive).

The amending actors in Slovakia did not acquiesce, however, nor did they hesitate to adopt a new constitutional amendment rejecting judicial review of constitutional change in retaliation. The opposition challenged this action arguing that a judicially enforced doctrine of unamendability is a necessary component of a modern-day liberal democracy.

Then at the end of May 2022, the Constitutional Court finally had its say. The Court opted for a passive-aggressive approach, issuing what is colloquially known as a quasi-meritorious judgment. The court rejected the petition in a procedural ruling but supplied it with the reasoning that would fit better with a meritorious decision. A quasi-meritorious decision indicates that the Court wants to speak on the subject but for whatever reason cannot. In this case, the Court rejected the petition because the amendment it was supposed to review, prevented it from reviewing constitutional amendments.

In the decision, the Courts confirmed its previous position that the Constitution, or at least its core, is unamendable and those core principles may in the extreme require judicial protection. The Court continues to maintain that the amending actors are not the absolute sovereign and are in fact limited in the exercise of great power by the basic constitutional framework delimited by The People at the moment of founding.

In the view of the Court, the Constitution is not value-neutral: "Although every legal norm is fundamentally changeable and revocable, from the point of view of the Constitution adopted in 1992, the basic principles of a democratic and rule of law (even without such explicit wording) are immutable." These values express the essence of the constitutional law posited by the sovereign (but identified by the Court through its case law), which can be further articulated by the amending actors to the extent the values are not broken.

The Court held that with the adoption of the constitution, the "unlimited sovereignty of the citizens was transformed into the sovereignty of the state on its territory, exercised by a system of the delegated powers." The three delegated powers are limited in competence and ought to be exercised to, among other things, protect democracy retrogressions. So the amending actors can do wrong, but the Court will generally exercise restraint when it comes to constitutional change. The Court accepted that the Court itself is too a limited power, which means that it cannot, in the time of ordinary politics review a constitutional amendment.

The Court essentially found that absent extraordinary circumstances, functional judicial review of constitutional change is not part of the material core. In extreme cases, however, of a core violation that has the intensity to change the character of the Slovak Republic as a democratic state based on the principle of the rule of law, the Court must intervene as the "constitutional guardian." If the amending actors were to overreach, the interpretation of the Constitutional Court's own competences would have to be extensively adapted to it to ensure the integrity of the founding document.

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Ghostwriters of the Slovak Constitution’s Material Core: Summary of Findings

On January 30, 2019, the Slovak Constitutional Court struck down a constitutional amendment for breaking the implicit material core of the Constitution.[1] This was a historic first not only for Slovakia but also for the broader region because no other European court had previously founded the doctrine of unconstitutional constitutional amendment without textual support in the constitution.[2] However, three years after the decision, there remains normative disagreement about the legitimacy and implications of the judge-made doctrine of unamendability in Slovakia.

In this blog post, I present a new finding that a significant portion of the decision in the case PL. ÚS 21/2014 exhibits lexical similarity to the academic source material without proper attribution. This finding raises serious questions about the ethics of opinion writing at the Slovak Constitutional Court and the capacity of the Court to deliver high-quality decisions in difficult cases under time- and resource constraints. But this post is just a summary of the main findings. If you want to know more, you have to wait for the paper I am writing!

Main Finding

After examining the opinion in the case PL. ÚS 21/2014 for similarity with external sources, I found that there is a significant overlap between the opinion and at least seven academic sources that are accessible online. The matched source material was all published before the resolution of the case in January 2019. The observed similarity pertains exclusively to the part of the opinion on the material core of the Constitution, which is approximately 66 pages long (roughly 21,000 words). My estimate is that 40 percent of the text exhibit close lexical similarity with the source material.

The two sources with the most overlap are the only book published on unamendability in Slovakia The Material Core of the Constitution of the Slovak Republic (2014) and an article from a special symposium on Security Clearances of Judges (2018). Both of these publications have been authored by one of the clerks working on the case, and neither is cited or referred to in the opinion. This has been noted at least by two other authors, Neuman and Káčer, who in their shared text wrote (in a footnote) that they found an unattributed use of academic text in the opinion.[3] Neuman and Káčer suggested that the Court either plagiarised the source material or outsourced the production of the opinion to an external academic advisor (who self-plagiarised). Either of the two options are plausible and we will not know, which one is true without an official communication from the Court.

The Constitutional Court confirmed, in a response to my FOI request, that the clerk had worked on the case in the year 2018. This is a critical piece of information because the clerk’s contract was not recorded in the central registry of government contracts at the time.[4] 

Other Unattributed Source Use

Additionally, there is a strong correlation between the text of the decision and several academic articles, which were coincidentally authored by another external advisor, and a former Slovak Constitutional Court judge hired to work on the case as well as the academic work of a former head of the Czech Constitutional Court. Both of these individuals qualify as what I call "superclerks." Superclerks are former constitutional judges, who upon retirement take on the position of an external advisor to another judge of the Court. Superclerks conduct their work on vastly different terms from other clerks, because of their reputational capital and the knowledge they had acquired previously in the position they once held, but are now to serve.

The first judge-turned clerk has worked on the case from early 2014 until 2016 when his last contract expired. The contract of this advisor is unique because it is only one of the two external-adviser contracts in the government database that specifies the case file. The contract expressly states that the advisor was hired to work on the case PL. ÚS 21/2014. The second superclerk (former head of the Czech CC) wrote an expert opinion on the subject for the court just one month before the announcement of the final judgment in the case.

The full list of academic literature used in the opinion without attribution is as follows: 

  • Boris Balog, Materiálne jadro Ústavy Slovenskej republiky (Eurokódex 2014)
  • Boris Balog, "Bezpečnostné previerky sudcov," in Jozef Andraško, JUDr. Juraj Hamuľák (eds), Ústavodarná moc verzus kontrola ústavnosti (Comenius University in Bratislava 2018)
  • Ján Drgonec, "Základné práva a slobody a vyvodená pôsobnosť Ústavného súdu SR," in Ladislav Orosz, Tomáš Majerčák (eds), Ochrana ľudských práv a základných slobôd ústavnými súdmi a medzinárodnými súdnymi orgánmi – III. ústavné dni (Pavol Jozef Šafárik University 2014)
  • Ján Drgonec, "Neústavnosť ústavných zákonov v podmienkach Slovenskej republiky," (2015) 154 Právnik 8
  • Ján Drgonec, "Implikované právne normy v ústavnom poriadku Slovenskej republiky," (2017) Zo súdnej praxe 1
  • Pavel Holländer, "Materiální ohnisko ústavy a diskrece ústavodárce," (2005) 144 Právník 4
  • Pavel Holländer, "Sean Connery, nominalistická revoluce a koncept moderní demokracie," (2015) 154 Právník 1

Method

The method used to identify the similarity with the text of the opinion was relatively crude because the available English plagiarism checkers do not link to databases and repositories of Slovak academic texts. I had therefore manually checked each paragraph in the opinion for matches through a web search engine for matches with available online sources. The analysis was limited to accessible content, however, which means that the real overlap can be higher.

In this paper, I am primarily interested in the lexical similarity between the court decision and academic sources in the Slovak language, but I also find similarities with two texts published in Czech. Lexical similarity measures the correspondence of texts as the "intersection of word sets of the same or different language." It is possible that a comparison of the court decision to the source material in English or German might discover additional overlap, but such analysis goes beyond the scope of this paper. The Court referred to multiple sources in the field of comparative constitutional change.

After identifying a match, I downloaded the source material to an open similarity analysis software that matched the overlapping text pattern between two texts. The software was imprecise because of the limited functionality of comparing text documents. To match the required format, I converted pdf into text files. Formatting issues due to conversion might have resulted in undetected overlap, which again means that the real similarity can be significantly higher.

Suggested citation: Šimon Drugda, “Ghostwriters of the Slovak Constitution’s Material Core: Summary of Findings” (slovakconlaw, 29 March 2022) <https://slovakconlaw.blogspot.com/2022/03/ghostwriters-material-core.html>


[1] PL. ÚS 21/2014 <https://www.ustavnysud.sk/ussr-intranet-portlet/docDownload/718890c1-f3f4-43d8-9b76-36332dbd9b96/Rozhodnutie%20-%20N%C3%A1lez.pdf>           

[2] See Michel Hein, ‘The Least Dangerous Branch? Constitutional Review of Constitutional Amendments in Europe’ in Martin Belov (ed), Court, Politics and Constitutional Law: Judicialization of Politics and the Judiciary (2019) 195; also Yaniv Roznai and ‘Lech Garlicki, Introduction: Constitutional Unamendability in Europe’ (2019) 21 European Journal of Law Reform 3, 218

[3] Marek Káčer, Jakub Neumann, MATERIÁLNE JADRO V SLOVENSKOM ÚSTAVNOM PRÁVE Doktrinálny disent proti zrušeniu sudcovských previerok (Leges 2019) 60 (n98)

[4] An alternative explanation is that the clerks or external advisors hired by the Court had access to the draft opinion and used it in their academic work before the final judgment in the case. The publication date of the source material, however, mostly precedes the controversy. This indicates that the alterantive explanation, although theoretically possible does not seem true. 

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Dataset on constitutional change in Slovakia 1993-2020

This dataset is the first comprehensive resource in English and one of the first two resources on constitutional change in Slovakia in any language. The dataset records all successful changes to the Slovak constitutional system (n=42) adopted in the period 1993-2020. Feel free to use this resource with proper citation (also accessible under 

The dataset contains information about the duration of the amendment process for each amendment, support/opposition to the amendment, sponsor of the bill and other data. Indirect constitutional amendments contain code labels indicating their subject matter. The dataset also includes a codebook, explanatory sheet and links to the source material. The dataset will be updated over time. 

The constitutional system of the Slovak Republic is polytextual because it consists of direct and indirect amendments. Direct amendments change the master-text Constitution. There have been 19 direct amendments to the master-text Constitution in total. Indirect amendments are all other stand-alone constitutional acts. There have been 23 indirect constitutional amendments adopted since the founding of the independent Slovakia in 1993.


The other dataset on constitutional change was created at the same time by a team of academics under the leadership of Prof Orosz. We have been in contact about potential collaboration since our initiatives overlap. 

Suggested citation: Šimon Drugda, "Constitutional change in Slovakia 1993-2020 (n=42)" (slovakconlaw, 28 October 2021) <https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1SE65B1Mo_DzCYfax2RKzidhHPIK1-yQtnrE2ydwTWF8/edit#gid=2114259969>

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Draft Constitutional Amendment on Slovak Judiciary Made Public

On July 13, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) of the Slovak Republic submitted a draft constitutional amendment on judicial reform into the interdepartmental review. The bill is an attempt at a comprehensive reform of the general and constitutional judiciary that implements the main theses of the 2020-24 govt proclamation programme. 

The interdepartmental review restricts pathways to legislative and constitutional change by the executive. Unlike MPs, who are legally exempt from the prepublication, the Cabinet and Ministries must first submit every proposed change of the law on the books into the interdepartmental process (under Act No. 400/2015 Coll. on Lawmaking and the Collection of Laws). The process allows the general and professional public, as well as anyone interested, to comment on the bill before it is presented to Parliament. The prepublication of a piece of legislation allows the public to control the exercise of lawmaking and even constitution-making powers. The author of the bill ought to consider the comments and either agree or disagree with the changes or make alternative proposals.

The MoJ seemingly consulted the constitutional amendment bill on judicial reform widely, including the Judicial Council, the Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic and other stakeholders. It remains to be seen if the proposed reforms will be received well by the general and constitutional judiciary. The bill focuses on these critical items:

  • reform of the composition of the Judicial Council;
  • review of the property and declared assets of judges;
  • reform of the Constitutional Court;
  • constitutional review of legislation in complaint proceedings;
  • introduction of retirement age for lower court and Constitutional Court judges; and
  • the establishment of the Supreme Administrative Court.

According to the explanatory note to the bill, the MoJ has the following opinion of a constitutional amendment: 

A sensible and prudent constitution-maker implements more extensive changes to the text of the Constitution either (i) due to "tectonic" societal change and the consequent need to adapt the text of the Constitution to the new social contract (in which case the amendment is remaking the Constitution to reflect the new identity of the community), or (ii) due to a change of paradigm of understanding and out views on the optimal design of a specific constitutional mechanism, design of govt power or the function of a constitutional body (in which case the amendment corrects specific elements of the constitutional identity of the community). From this point of view, the proposed constitutional amendment falls within the second category of changes to the master-text Constitution [...] 

Let us return to this reform after some time and judge whether the proposed reforms better specific points of constitutional design or instead negatively impact the document's identity.


Suggested citation: Šimon Drugda, "Draft Constitutional Amendment on Slovak Judiciary Made Public" (slovakconlaw, 26 July 2020) <https://slovakconlaw.blogspot.com/2020/07/draft-constitutional-amendment-on.html> 

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Key judicial reform policies from Slovak govt manifesto 2020-24

The general election in Slovakia took place on February 29, 2020, just before the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic. The election resulted in the most significant change in the executive in the last decade when the party of the three-time PM Robert Fico (SMER-SD) lost to the opposition party OĽANO. After the election, the President, based on a constitutional convention, entrusted the leader of the political party that won the election with the task of forming the government. 

A new government has to draft and submit its Programme Proclamation for a vote in the Parliament (within 30 days of receiving the mandate from the President). The Programme Proclamation is a crucial document for govt coalitions, which delimits the policy agenda of the new govt for the next four years and points of shared interest. Contentious issues and campaign promises are often omitted from the Proclamation in favour of building consensus.

If the majority of the MPs vote in support of the Programme Proclamation, the govt has received the confidence of the Parliament. However, the initial vote of confidence is often a mere formality since the executive and legislature in Slovakia are intimately suffused.

This short post highlights salient constitutional questions in the 2020-24 govt Programme Proclamation, mainly related to the reorganisation of the Constitutional Court and the reintroduction of vetting of lower court judges.

The government will initiate a constitutional and legislative change of the organisation of the judiciary, namely:

Judicial Council

  • A reform of the composition of the Judicial Council of the Slovak Republic to provide for regional representation of judges on the Council. The Slovak Judicial Council consists of non-judges appointed by the executive and the legislature, and members elected by judges from their ranks. This latter group of councillors has been perceived as geographically unrepresentative because most elected judges come from two or three high-profile courts.
  • A new practice that the legislative and executive power should always nominate non-judges to the Judicial Council. This proposal sought to balance non-judicial and judicial representation on the Council. However, the govt immediately went against its own proposal when a junior member of the govt coalition nominated a judge for the position on the Council against the opposition of the Minister of Justice.
  • A proposal that the legislature will appoint members of the Judicial Council through a transparent selection process.
  • Govt response to the Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic in matters of dismissal of members of the Judicial Council of the Slovak Republic, which has been perceived as ultra vires. This controversial decision of the ConCourt denied the executive and legislature the ability to remove their appointments to the Judicial Council before the expiry of their terms of office. The decision effectively erased the provision in the Constitution, which explicit grants the removal power to the legislate and executive in respect of their appointees to the Council.

Vetting of Lower Court Judges

  • Reintroduction of judicial vetting by the Judicial Council of lower court judges. The government proposed to reintroduce, in some form, the constitutional amendment on background checks for judges, which had been invalidated by the Constitutional Court in 2019. 

The specific design of the vetting scheme has not been made public yet. However, it seems that the Council will first conduct a thorough review of the financial declarations of all lower court judges, including the property of close family members. The Council holds an annual review of financial statements of judges, but the reliability of the review has been questioned, based on recent revelations after Operation Storm. If the Council finds discrepancies in a judge's declared income and expenses, the judge may need to be vetted.

Constitutional Court 

  • A reform of the composition of the Constitutional Court that would prevent delays in the appointment of judges and introduce a staggered term of office to avoid the concentration power due to selection of a majority of judges by one party of govt coalition.
  • Abolition of the practice of secret ballot for the appointment of ConCourt judges.
  • To curb the power of the Constitutional Court to deny/approve detention of a judge and a prosecutor general. The govt also proposes to remove the decision-making immunity of judges.
  • The introduction of age limit for the office of lower court (65 years) and constitutional (70 years) court judges. There are currently three judges of the Constitutional Court who will serve beyond their age cap.
  • Additionally, the govt stated that it would examine the possibility of an extension to the power of the ConCourt to review the constitutionality of statutes in constitutional complaint cases as well as ex-ante.

New Supreme Administrative Court

  • The establishment of the Supreme Administrative Court, which will also function as a disciplinary court for judges, prosecutors, executors, notaries, administrators and, where appropriate, for other legal professions. The introduction of another specialised court should also ease the workload of the ConCourt.

Suggested citation: Šimon Drugda, "Key judicial reform policies from Slovak govt manifesto 2020-24" (slovakconlaw, July 2020) <https://slovakconlaw.blogspot.com/2020/07/key-policies-from-slovak-govt-manifesto.html> 

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Running list of new scholarship on Slovak constitutional law

Books
Papers
Contributions to edited books
Case Notes

Blogs 2021
2020