Senator for life
A senator for life is a member of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo
The
is the only senator for life after serving as president from 2001 to 2019.The 1964 Congolese constitution also provided for life membership in the Senate for former presidents.[2]
Italy
In
Paraguay
Former presidents of the Republic, except for those who were impeached from office, are granted the speaking-but-non-voting position of senator for life.[3]
Russia
The lifetime senatorship appeared in the
Rwanda
The
Former systems
Burundi
In
Canada
In a manner reminiscent of the British House of Lords, members of the Canadian Senate were appointed for life. Since the Constitution Act, 1965, however, senators must retire upon reaching the age of 75. Though senators appointed before the amendment were grandfathered in by the legislation, there are no longer any lifetime senators present in the Canadian Senate. Orville Howard Phillips, the last senator for life, resigned his seat in 1999.
France
In
In 2005, there was questioning about the status of former
This proposal was, however, not enacted.Romania
The 1923 Constitution instituted the membership by right (senator de drept) in the Senate for:
- the heir-apparent or heir-presumptive to the throne
- Metropolitan bishops and diocesan bishops of the Orthodox and Greek-Catholic churches
- heads of state-recognised religious bodies
- the president of the Romanian Academy
- former presidents of the Council of Ministers
- former ministers with at least six years’ seniority
- former presidents of either legislative chamber who held this function for at least eight ordinary sessions
- former senators and deputies elected to at least ten legislatures, irrespective of their duration
- former presidents of the High Court of Cassation and Justice
- reserve and retired generals
- former presidents of the National Assemblies at Chişinău, Cernăuţi and Alba Iulia, which proclaimed their respective provinces’ union with Romania in 1918 (see Union of Bessarabia with Romania, Union of Bukovina with Romania and Union of Transylvania with Romania)
The membership by right was maintained under the 1938 Constitution and it was abolished together with the Senate on July 15, 1946, by the Communist Party-dominated government of Petru Groza.
Although the current constitution of Romania re-established the bicameral Parliament in 1991, it did not reinstate the office of senator by right.
Rome
The Roman Senate, which existed in various forms between the founding of the city of Rome in 753 BC and the fall of the Byzantine Empire in the 14th century AD, was composed of senators which served for life, the number of whom fluctuated from 100 to thousands of men.
South and Central America
The constitutions of a number of countries in South America have granted former presidents the right to be senator for life (senador vitalicio), possibly recalling the entirely unelected Senate of Simón Bolívar's theory (see Bolivar's tricameralism). Most of these countries have since excised these provisions as they are increasingly seen as antidemocratic. The Constitution of Paraguay still has such a provision. Former presidents are permitted to speak but not vote.
- In better source needed]
- In a unicameral parliament.
- In human rights violations until the Chilean Supreme Court revoked it in 2000. The provision was abolished by constitutional reforms in 2005.[10]
- In Nicaragua, the 1974 Constitution granted lifetime membership in that country's Senate to former presidents of the Republic.[11]
Brazil
The senators of the
Somalia
While the 1960 constitution of the Somali Republic (1960–1969) did not provide for a senate (the legislature, known as the National Assembly, was unicameral), it did grant lifetime membership in the legislature to ex-presidents of the Republic.[12] Aden Adde was the only person eligible to hold this position.
United States
During the Constitutional Convention of 1787, New York delegate Alexander Hamilton proposed that all members of the U.S. Senate, which was at time appointed by state legislatures and intended to check the power of the popularly elected House of Representatives, be appointed for life as a safeguard against "amazing violence and turbulence of the democratic spirit." His views did not prevail, and the final U.S. Constitution specified six-year terms for senators.[13]
See also
- Lords Spiritual
- Lords Temporal
- Term limits
- List of senators for life in Italy
Notes
- ^ Constitution de la République démocratique du Congo, Article 104 (paragraph 6): "Les anciens Présidents de la République élus sont de droit sénateurs à vie." (Loosely translated, this means "Former Presidents of the Republic are senators by right for life.") Source
- ^ "République démocratique du Congo, Constitution du 1er août 1964, Article 75 (paragraph 4): "En sus des sénateurs visés au 2e alinéa du présent article, font de droit, partie à vie du Sénat les anciens présidents de la République."".
- ^ Constitution of the Republic of Paraguay, 1992, Article 189 (subsection 1): "(1) Former presidents of the Republic who were democratically elected will be national senators for life, except for those who were impeached from office. (2) They will not count toward a quorum. They will have the right to speak, but not to vote."
- ^ Закон РФ о поправке к Конституции РФ от 14.03.2020 N 1-ФКЗ "О совершенствовании регулирования отдельных вопросов организации и функционирования публичной власти". Ст. 1
- ^ Constitution of the Republic of Rwanda, Article 82, section 5° (second paragraph): "Former Heads of State who honourably completed their terms or voluntarily resigned from office become members of the Senate by submitting a request to the Supreme Court." Source
- ^ "Les sénateurs inamovibles". Archived from the original on 18 June 2006.
- ^ La Chiraquie veut protéger son chef quand il quittera l'Elysée, Libération, 14 January 2005
- ^ See also the constitutional amendment proposals by senator Patrice Gélard [1][2]
- ^ Paz de Henríquez, Norma (3 June 1998). La conveniencia o no de los senadores vitalicios (PDF). Retrieved 10 January 2024.
- December 2005 parliamentary elections and was President of the Senatefrom 2006 to 2008.
- ^ "The former presidents of the republic who held the presidency by direct popular vote shall be life members of the Senate; and the presidential candidate of the party that obtained second place in the corresponding popular vote shall be a member of the Senate for the term for which he was nominated." Constitution of the Republic of Nicaragua, 1974. Article 127, second paragraph.
- ^ Constitution of the Somali Republic, 1960. Article 51 ("National Assembly"), paragraph 4: "Whoever has been President of the Republic shall become a deputy for life as of right, in addition to the elected deputies, provided that he has not been convicted of any of the crimes referred to in paragraph 1 of Article 76."
- ^ "U.S. Senate: Seven-year Senate Terms?". www.senate.gov. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
- ^ Sabato, Larry. A More Perfect Constitution.
External links
- Senato.it: Senatori a vita (in Italian) — Italian lifetime senators (XVII legislation – June 2017)