Constitutional Council of France

Constitutional Council of France

Constitutional Council of France (Conseil Constitutionnel)

In relation to the constitutional council of france (conseil constitutionnel) and constitutional law, Guillaume Tusseau[1] made the following observation: Since the Revolution, French constitutionalism has established an original pattern of constitutional guarantee. Fearing that judges might try to curb the legislator's will, as the Ancien Régime courts of justice had done by invoking ' fundamental laws ', the French constituants established that ordinary judges would not be allowed 'directly or indirectly to take any part in the exercise of legislative power nor to prevent or suspend the execution of the decrees of the legislative body, sanctioned by the King' (16–24 August 1790 Act, Title II, Art. 10 (Fr)). (…)

Resources

Notes and References

  1. Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law, Guillaume Tusseau, “Constitutional Council of France (Conseil Constitutionnel)” (2018, Germany, United Kingdom)

See Also

  • Judicial review of legislation
  • Legislative oversight of the executive
  • Checks and balances

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