CONSTITUTION OF UKRAINE


The 'Constitution of Ukraine' () was adopted at the 5th session of the Verkhovna Rada (''parliament'') of Ukraine, on June 28, 1996. The constitution was passed with 315 ayes out of 450 possible (300 ayes minimum). The Constitution is the fundamental law of the land: laws and other normative legal acts must conform to it. The right to amend the Constitution through a special legislative procedure is vested exclusively with the parliament. The only body that may interpret the Constitution and determine whether legislation conforms to it is the Constitutional Court of Ukraine.

Contents
History of the constitution
History of the amendments
External links

History of the constitution


Verkhovna Rada deputees sign the constitution on June 28, 1996.

Until June 8, 1995, Ukraine's supreme law was the Constitution (Fundamental Law) of the Ukrainian SSR (adopted in 1978, with numerous later amendments). On June 8, 1995, President Leonid Kuchma and Speaker Oleksandr Moroz (acting on behalf of the parliament) signed the Constitutional Agreement for the period until a new constitution could be drafted.

Present Constitution was adopted at a dramatic overnight parliamentary session of June 27 - June 28, 1996, semi-officially known as "the constitutional night of 1996". The Law No. 254/96-BP ratifying the Constitution, nullifying previous Constitution and the Agreement was ceremonially signed and promulgated in mid-July 1996. However, according to a ruling of the Constitutional Court, current Constitution took force at the moment when the results of the parliamentary vote were announced, i.e., June 28, 1996, at approx. 9 a.m. Kiev time.

History of the amendments


President Kuchma has signed the amendments on December 8, 2004.

On December 8, 2004, the parliament passed the Law No. 2222-IV amending the Constitution. The law was approved with a 90 percent majority (402 ayes, 21 nays, and 19 abstentions; 300 ayes required for passage) simultaneously with other legislative measures aimed at resolving the presidential election crisis. It was signed almost immediately in the parliamentary chamber by the outgoing President Leonid Kuchma and promulgated on the same day.
Most of the amendments were scheduled to take force on September 1, 2005, ''conditionally'' on passing a set of amendments reforming local self-government by that date. Since the reform of the self-government was not implemented, the amendments took force ''unconditionally'' on January 1, 2006. The remaining amendments took force on May 25, 2006, when the new parliament assembled after the 2006 elections.
Some political parties said that Law No. 2222-IV was passed with the severe procedural infractions. They want to complain to the Constitutional Court of Ukraine. If this law will be cancelled by the Court than the Constitution will return to its previous edition.

External links




'Official text of Constitution' — site of the parliament

Constitution of Ukraine (with 2004 amendments)

English translation of Constitution of 1996 — without changes from 2004

Amendments (Law No. 2222-IV) — site of the parliament

Constitution of 1978 — site of the parliament

Constitutional Agreement of 1995 — site of the parliament

Declaration on the State Sovereignty of July 16, 1990 — site of the parliament

Independence Act of August 24, 1991 — site of the parliament
:''Note: The English publication of Ukraine's constitution on the Official Rada and President's web sites are outdated. For a copy of the current version (dated 25 May 2006) see the collection of documents on the Venice Commission's web site copy also available on .''


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