Constitution of Haiti
The Constitution of Haiti (French: Constitution d'Haïti) most commonly refers to the present-day Constitution of Haiti, which was modeled after those of the United States and of France. The document was ratified in March 1987, but it was completely suspended from June 1988 to March 1989 and was only fully reinstated in October 1994. The recent elections of February 8, 2006 to elect a new President were held in accordance with the electoral stipulations of this same constitution.
History
A total of 23 constitutions have been promulgated throughout Haïti's history,[1] the first of which was promulgated under the short-lived government of then-Governor-General Toussaint L'Ouverture, who had become the leader of the revolutionary forces in the Haitian Revolution.
- Constitution of Saint-Domingue (1801). Established Toussaint as Governor for Life and gave him the right to select his successor (future governors would be limited to 5 year terms.) Provided a mechanism to overthrow any governor avoiding election. Abolished slavery and racial restrictions on employment, but upheld fermage, leases, and restrictions on movement. Estates abandoned by their owners during the revolution to be held and operated in trust by the government, but not nationalized. Banned free assembly, all religions other than Catholicism, divorce, and any imports in competition with local manufactures.
- Constitution of 1804
- Constitution of Hayti (1805). First constitution of Haiti proper. Created a non-hereditary empire under Dessalines. This constitution provided for freedom of religion, banned most whites from citizenship or owning land in Haiti, and declared all citizens "black" in an effort to end racism based on lightness of skin.
- Constitution of 1806, for the southern Republic of Haiti, written largely by Alexandre Pétion.
- Constitution of 1807 formalized a northern State of Haiti with Christophe as its President for Life and a small appointed Council of State, composed primarily of generals. Banned divorce and public exercise of any religion other than Catholicism, and suspended operation of the constitution at any location attended by the army. Unusual in its omission of any prohibition against white ownership of land.
- Constitution of 1811 for the northern State of Haiti, establishing a hereditary monarchy under Christophe. Again, prohibition against white ownership of land was omitted.
- Revision of the Haitian Constitution of 1806 (1816). Created a bicameral legislature, established Pétion as President for Life, restricted the legislature to only consider bills proposed by the president, and provided for laws by presidential order, except for taxation. The Senate was no longer directly elected, but selected by the lower house from a list of nominees provided by the president. This constitution also provided automatic Haitian citizenship to any black, indian, or person of mixed race who resided in the nation for more than a year.
- Constitution of 1843 under Charles Rivière-Hérard.
- Constitution of 1816 restored by Jean-Baptiste Riché.
- Constitution of 1849. Re-established Haïti as an empire under Faustin I.
- Constitution of 1874 under Michel Domingue. Granted the executive had the power to dissolve the Chambers and to establish a Council of State to aid the Government. Power was given to the president for one year to change the judges and magistrates.
- Constitution of 1879
- Constitution of 1889
- Constitution of 1902
- Constitution of 1918, acclaimed by sham U.S.-backed plebiscite: 98,225 for, 769 against.
- Constitution of 1932
- Constitution of 1935. Fascist and anti-democratic. Allowed Sténio Vincent broad powers, including the ability to succeed himself.
- Constitution of 1932 reinstated (1942.)
- Constitution of 1946, Nov. 22. Constitution of Dumarsais Estime. Heinl, p. 552.
- Constitution of 1950.[2] Enfranchised women.
- Constitution of 1957.
- Constitution of 1964. Established François Duvalier as President for Life.
- Constitution of 1983
- Constitution of Haïti (1987). The current constitution. Bans dual citizenship, effectively restricting Haitian-Americans (such as Samir Mourra and Dumarsais Simeus) from running for president in Haiti.
References
External links