Principiul loialității constituționale și principiul colaborării instituționale loiale în raporturile Parlamentului cu celelalte autorități publice
The principle of constitutional loyalty and the principle of loyal institutional collaboration in the relations of the Parliament with other public authorities
Author(s): Cristian IonescuSubject(s): Constitutional Law
Published by: Uniunea Juriștilor din România
Keywords: constitutional loyalty; the principle of separation of powers; the principle of loyal institutional collaboration; governance; Venice Commission; Constitutional Court;
Summary/Abstract: In this article, the author aims to analyze the theoretical foundations of two essential principles for the state of law and how to balance the relations between the three powers: the principle of constitutional loyalty and the principle of loyal institutional collaboration between the public authorities vested with the governing powers. The two principles are not formally provided in the text of the Constitution, but can be deduced by way of interpretation from other constitutional principles.As for the first principle, the author shows that it has its source in the obligation freely assumed by each member of a community of individuals organized according to the principles of social hierarchy, or imposed by the public authority with supreme force in the community, to respect a summum of legal norms, whose purpose consists in the regulation and harmonization of the social relations. The origin of the second principle is found in the principle of separation of the three powers in the state, which in the governing process are obliged to collaborate loyally with each other, within the institutional framework prescribed by the constitutional norm.In the end, the author concludes that the substance of the principle of constitutional loyalty includes not only the general obligation of citizens and of both public authorities and institutions to respect the will of the Constituent Legislator formally expressed in the text of the Constitution, but also the obligation of the STATE and of each public authority provided in the Constitution, to be loyal to the CITIZEN. Otherwise, the relations between the state and the citizen are compromised, or will take the form and content of totalitarian-type relations, in which the individual is deprived of rights and absorbed by the state as a dehumanized form of life.The author considers that the loyalty of the state towards the citizen is an obligation of constitutional rank and, on this basis, he proposes, de lege ferenda, its express inclusion in the text of the Constitution at a future revision thereof.
Journal: Revista „Dreptul”
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 12
- Page Range: 120-136
- Page Count: 17
- Language: Romanian
- Content File-PDF