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The
Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (German language:
Grundgesetz für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland) is the constitutionhttp://www.bundestag.de/parlament/funktion/gesetze/grundgesetz/index.html of Germany. It first came into effect in 1949 as the
de facto constitution of
West Germany.
The German word
Grundgesetz may be translated as either
Basic Law or
Fundamental Law. The term
Verfassung (constitution) was not used, as the drafters regarded the
Grundgesetz as a provisional document, to be replaced by the constitution of a future
German reunification. This was not possible in the context of the
Cold War and the Communism orientation of the Soviet occupation zone, which later in 1949 proclaimed itself the German Democratic Republic, dividing Germany into two states.
Forty years later, in 1990, Germany finally
German reunification when the GDR peacefully joined the West German West Germany. After reunification, the Basic Law remained in force, having proved itself as a stable foundation for the
Wirtschaftswunder democracy in West Germany that had emerged from the ruins of
World War II. Some changes were made to the law in 1990, mostly pertaining to reunification, such as to the
preamble. Additional amendments to the Basic Law were made in 1994, 2002 and 2006.
Drafting process
The idea for the creation of the
Basic Law came originally from the three western
Allied Occupation Zones in Germany. In view of the Nazism usurpation of Germany's prewar
Weimar Constitution, they made their approval of the creation of a new German state conditional on:
- a complete rejection of the ideology that the German people are a master race (German: Herrenrasse) - superior to others, born to be leaders, and entitled to commit genocide, or barbaric treatment of those not belonging to it;
- an unequivocal commitment to the inviolability and inalienability of human rights.
The draft was prepared by the
Herrenchiemsee Convent (10 August–
23 August 1948) on the
Herreninsel in Chiemsee, a lake in southeastern
Bavaria. The delegates at the Convent were appointed by the leaders of the newly formed
States of Germany. After being passed by the parliamentary council assembling at the
Museum Koenig in Bonn (
8 May 1949) - the Museum was the only intact building in Bonn large enough to house the assembly - and after being approved by the occupying powers (
12 May 1949), it was ratified by every parliament of the
Länder with the exception of
Bavaria (
:de:Bayern). On 23 May 1949, the German Basic Law was promulgated and came into force a day later. The time of
legal nonentity ended, as the new German state, the Federal Republic of Germany, came into being.
Important differences from the Weimar Constitution
Basic rights are fundamental to the Basic Law, in contrast to the Weimar Constitution, which listed them merely as "state objectives". Under the premise to respect human dignity, all state power is directly bound to guarantee these basic rights. Article 1 of the Basic Law (in German legal shorthand GG, for
Grundgesetz), which establishes this principle that "human dignity shall be inviolable" and that human rights are directly applicable law, as well as the general principles of the state in Article 20 GG, which guarantees democracy, republicanism, social responsibility, federalism, and the right of resistance should anybody undertake to abolish this order, remain under the guarantee of perpetuity stated in Article 79 Paragraph 3, i.e., those two cannot be changed even if the normal amendment process is followed.
There are no emergency powers as for the
Reichspräsident, which were used in the Reichstag Fire Decree of 1933 to suspend basic rights and to remove communist members of the Reichstag from power, an important step for
Hitler Machtergreifung. The suspension of human rights would also be illegal by Articles 20 and 79 GG, as above.
The constitutional position of the federal government was strengthened, as the
Bundespräsident has only a small fraction of the power of the
Reichspräsident. The government now depends only on the parliament.
To remove the chancellor, the parliament has to engage in a
Constructive Vote of No Confidence (
Konstruktives Misstrauensvotum), i.e. the election of a new chancellor. The new procedure was intended to provide more stability than under the Weimar Constitution, where extremists on the left and right would cooperate to remove a chancellor, without agreeing on a new one, creating a leadership vacuum. In addition it was possible for the parliament to remove single ministers by a vote of distrust while it now has to vote against the cabinet as a whole.
Constitutional institutions
The Basic Law established Germany as a parliamentary democracy with separation of powers into executive branch, legislative branch, and
judicial branches. The legislative branch reflects Germany's Federalism structure in which the German
Länder were to be represented in the upper house of parliament, the Bundesrat_of_Germany. The lower chamber, the
Bundestag, was to be elected directly through a mixture of proportional representation and direct mandates. The head of government is the Bundeskanzler, normally (but not necessarily) the leader of the largest grouping in the Bundestag, while the head of state is the nonpartisan and largely ceremonial
President of Germany. The
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany oversees the constitutionality of laws. Many of the Basic Law's provisions contrast strongly with those of the Weimar Constitution.
Presidency
The German
Bundespräsident (federal president) is the head of state. It is largely ceremonial position with only a small role in daily politics. Whereas the Weimar Constitution provided the president with far reaching executive powers, turning him into a de facto
substitute emperor, the federal president is now limited in favor of the cabinet and the parliament. His main function is representative and ceremonial, though he remains the formal
head of state, signs laws before they can enter into force and appoints federal officials. In contrast to the Weimar president, the new federal president can neither take the initiative to dissolve the Bundestag nor name a new chancellor without a prior majority vote in the parliament.
Executive branch
The Chancellor, elected by the Bundestag, is head of the executive branch. He or she heads the federal
Cabinet_of_Germany.
Judicial branch: Federal Constitutional Court
The guardian of the Basic Law is the German Federal Constitutional Court (
Bundesverfassungsgericht) which is both an independent constitutional organ and at the same time part of the judiciary in the sectors of constitutional law and public international law. Its judgements have the legal status of ordinary law. It can declare statutes as null and void if they are in violation of the Basic Law.
The court is famous for nullifying several high profile laws, passed by large majorities in the parliament. An example is the
Luftsicherheitsgesetz, which would have allowed the
Bundeswehr to shoot down civilian airplanes in case of a terrorist attack. It was ruled to be in violation of the guarantee of life in the Basic Law.
The Federal Constitutional Court decides on the constitutionality of laws and government actions under the following circumstances:
- individual complaint - a suit brought by a person alleging that a law or any action of government violated his or her constitutional rights. All remedies available in the regular courts must have been exhausted beforehand.
- referral by regular court - a court can refer the question whether a statute applicable to the case before that court is constitutional.
- abstract regulation control - the federal government, a government of one of the federal states or a third of the Bundestag's members can bring suit against a law. In this case the suit need not refer to a specific case of the law's application.
The Weimar Constitution did not institute a court with similar powers. When the Basic Law is amended, this has to be done explicitly; the concerning article must be cited. Under Weimar the constitution could be amended without noticing; any law passed with a two-thirds majority vote was not bound by the constitution. Under the Basic Law, the fundamentals of the constitution in Art. 1 GG and Art. 20 GG, as well as elements of the federalist state, cannot be removed. Especially important is the protection of the division of state powers in the three branches, legislative, executive and judicial. This is provided by Art. 20 GG. A clear separation of powers was considered imperative to prevent measures like an over-reaching
Enabling act , as happened in Enabling Act of 1933. This act had then given the government legislative powers which effectively finished the Weimar Republic and led to the dictatorship of the
Third Reich.
Legislative branch
The legislative branch consists of two chambers, the Bundesrat, representing the states, and the directly elected Bundestag. The Bundestag elects the
Chancellor of Germany, the head of government, who usually but not necessarily is the leader of the party or the party with a plurality of seats in the Bundestag.
Bundesrat
Germany's upper chamber of parliament, the Bundesrat, represents the
Länder (~States). It has great influence in legislation, whereas the Reichsrat of Weimar only had a suspensive veto over legislation passed by the parliament. However, a major difference between the two systems is the relative size of the German
Länder. During the Weimar Republic, most of Germany's population and 60 percent of its land area was held by a single state,
Prussia; its smallest state,
Free State of Schaumburg-Lippe, had a population of only tens of thousands. A 1932
coup in Prussia, the
Preußenschlag, did much to destabilize Germany as a whole, leading to Hitler's seizure of power months later. In contrast, while widely varied in size and population, today's
Bundesländer are striclty regional entities.
Bundestag
Role of political parties
In contrast to Weimar, political parties are explicitly mentioned in the constitution, i.e. officially recognized as important participants in politics. Parties are obliged to adhere to the democratic foundations of the German state. Parties found in violation of this requirement may be abolished by the constitutional court. In the Weimar Republic, the public image of political parties was clearly negative and they were often regarded as vile. At the same time there was no obligation to adhere to democratic standards (in contrast, the Basis Law stipulates that parties' "... internal organisation must conform to democratic principles", which precludes any party using the Führerprinzip, even internally.) Extremist parties with anti-constitutional agendas like the communists (KPD), right-wing conservatives (DNVP) or the Nazis (NSDAP) could increase their influence without much opposition.
Other stipulations
Role of the military
The Weimar Constitution contributed to the
Reichswehr becoming a state inside a state, outside of the control of the parliament or the public. The army directly reported to the president who himself was not dependent on the parliament. Under the Basic Law, during times of peace the Bundeswehr reports to the secretary of defence, during time of war to the chancellor. The chancellor is directly responsible to the parliament, the secretary is indirectly responsible to the parliament because it can remove the government by electing a new chancellor. The Basic Law also institutes the parliamentary post of the
Wehrbeauftragter, reporting to parliament not to the executive. The
Wehrbeauftragter is a soldiers' ombudsman who can be petitioned directly by soldiers, bypassing the chain of command. Disciplinary measures against soldiers petitioning the
Wehrbeauftragter are prohibited.
Although this is not explicitly spelled out in the Basic Law, a number of Constitutional Court cases in the 1990s established that the army may not be deployed by the government outside of NATO territory without a specific resolution of parliament, which describes the details of the mission and limits its term.
Referendums and plebiscites
Unlike the Weimar Constitution, the Basic Law only allows referendums on a single issue: changing borders of the
Länder.
Baden-Württemberg was founded following a 1952 referendum that approved the fusion of three separate states. In a 1996 referendum the inhabitants of
Berlin and
Brandenburg rejected a proposed merger of the two states. The denial of referendums in other cases was designed to avoid the kind of populism that allowed the rise of
Hitler, although it ignores the long-running stability of the Swiss Confederation.
Development of the Basic Law since 1949
Important changes to the Basic Law were the re-introduction of conscription and the establishment of the Bundeswehr in 1956. Therefore several articles were introduced into the constitution, e.g. Art. 12a, 17, 45a-c, 65a, 87a-c GG. Another important reform were the introduction in 1968 of emergency competences, for example Art. 115 Paragraph 1 GG. This was done by a grand coalition of the two main political parties CDU/CSU and SPD and was accompanied by heated debate. In the following year there were changes to the articles regarding the distribution of taxes between federal government and the states of Germany.
During German reunification the possibility of drafting of a new common constitution by the two states and a subsequent plebiscite, as envisioned in Art. 146 (1990), was discussed but was not taken. Instead the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic decided to keep the Basic Law with only minor changes, because it had proved to be effective in West Germany. To facilitate reunification and to reassure other states, the FRG made some changes to the Basic Law. Article 146 was amended so that Article 23 of 1990 version of the constitution could be used to acquire further territories. Then, once the five New Länder of East Germany had joined, the Basic Law was amended again to indicate that there were no other parts of Germany, that existed outside of the unified territory. Johnson, Edward Elwyn. International law aspects of the German refunification alternative answers to the German question. Page 11 footnote 18, and Page 26. periodic reports of States parties due in 1993 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (CCPR),
22 February 1996. Introduction: paragraph 6.
Since then there have only been some minor changes. In 1992 membership in the European Union was institutionalised (Art. 23 GG), in 1994 and 2002 environmental protection and animal protection were included in Art. 20 a GG as policy objectives of state. The most controversial debate arose concerning the limitation of the right to asylum in 1993 as in the current version of Art. 16 a GG. This change was later challenged and confirmed in a judgment by the constitutional court. Another controversy was spawned by the limitation of the right to the invulnerability of the private domain (
Unverletzlichkeit der Wohnung) by means of acoustic observation (
Großer Lauschangriff). This was done by changes to Art. 13 Paragraph 3 and Art. 6 GG. The changes were challenged in the constitutional court, but the judges confirmed the changes. Other changes took place regarding a redistribution of competencies between federal government and the
Länder.
Early elections
The Basic Law contains no clear provision to call early elections. Neither the chancellor nor the Bundestag has the power to call elections, and the
President of Germany can do so only if the government loses a confidence vote or a
constructive vote of no confidence fails. This was designed to avoid the chronic instability of
Weimar Republic governments. However, early elections have been called three times (1972, 1982, and 2005). On the last two occasions this was a controversial move and was referred to the constitutional court for review.
In
1972, Chancellor
Willy Brandt's coalition had lost its majority in the Bundestag, so that the opposition CDU/CSU tried to do a constructive vote of no confidence, thus electing
Rainer Barzel as new chancellor. Surprisingly, two representative of CDU/CSU voted for SPD's Willy Brandt, so that the vote failed. Nevertheless, the coalition had no majority in the Bundestag, so that a new election was necessary. (Later it turned out that the
Hauptverwaltung Aufklärung (GDR) had bribed the two dissenting representatives.)
In
1982, Chancellor Helmut Kohl intentionally lost a confidence vote in order to call an early election to strengthen his position in the Bundestag. The Federal Constitutional Court of Germany examined the case, and decided that the vote was valid, but with reservations. It was decided that a vote of no confidence could be engineered only if it were based on an actual legislative impasse.
In 2005, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder engineered a defeat in a
motion of confidence after a power shift in the
Bundesrat of Germany. President Horst Köhler then called
German federal election, 2005 for
18 September 2005. The constitutional court agreed to the validity of this procedure on
August 25, 2005 and the elections duly took place.
Footnotes
See also
Former Constitutions
Others
- Bremen clause
- Bundesrechnungshof
- German Emergency Acts
- History of Germany
- Politics of Germany
External links
- Full text:
- Official English translation (status: December 2000)
- Original text: HTML, PDF, non-official table of contents (status: August 2006)
- Former Constitutions:
- s:Constitution of the German Empire. In English. Full text from Wikisource.
- Constitution of the Weimar Republic (1919-1933). In English, as HTML file.
- Excerpts from the 1968 Constitution of the GDR. In English, as HTML file.
- Other links:
- Introduction to the basic and the constitutional law (on JurisPedia).
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