Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution of South Africa
Constitution Fifteenth Amendment Act of 2008 |
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Act to amend the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, so as to effect certain consequential amendments necessitated by the provisions of the Constitution Fourteenth Amendment Act of 2008; provide for the filling of vacancies in a Municipal Council; and abolish the right of a member of a Municipal Council to become a member of another political party whilst retaining membership of that Council; and of an existing political party to merge with another political party, or to subdivide into more than one political party, or to subdivide and to permit any of the subdivisions to merge with another political party, whilst allowing a member of a Council affected by such changes to retain membership of that Council; and to provide for matters connected therewith. |
Enacted by |
Parliament of South Africa |
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Date enacted |
20 August 2008 |
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Date assented to |
6 January 2009 |
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Date commenced |
17 April 2009 |
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Legislative history |
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Bill |
Constitution Fifteenth Amendment Bill |
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Bill citation |
B63B—2008 |
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Bill published on |
2 July 2008 |
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Introduced by |
Brigitte Mabandla, Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development |
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The Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution of South Africa (formally the Constitution Fifteenth Amendment Act of 2008) repealed some of the provisions inserted into the Constitution by the Eighth and Tenth Amendments which allowed for floor-crossing, that is, allowed members of legislative bodies to move from one political party to another without losing their seats. The remaining floor-crossing provisions were repealed by the Fourteenth Amendment, which was enacted at the same time.
The Fourteenth Amendment contained the repeal provisions which affected the provincial legislatures and the National Council of Provinces (NCOP), and therefore had to be approved by six of nine provinces in the NCOP as well as by two-thirds of the National Assembly, while the Fifteenth Amendment contained the remaining provisions which only had to be approved by the Assembly. The bills for both amendments were passed by the National Assembly on 20 August 2008, with the Fifteenth Amendment receiving 309 votes in favour and none opposed.[1] Both amendments were signed by President Kgalema Motlanthe on 6 January 2009, and came into force on 17 April 2009, days before the 2009 general election.
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External links
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| Chapters |
- 1: Founding Provisions
- 2: Bill of Rights
- 3: Co-operative Government
- 4: Parliament
- 5: President and National Executive
- 6: Provinces
- 7: Local Government
- 8: Courts and Administration of Justice
- 9: State Institutions Supporting Constitutional Democracy
- 10: Public Administration
- 11: Security Services
- 12: Traditional Leaders
- 13: Finance
- 14: General Provisions
- Schedules
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| Amendments | |
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