Marshallese Constitutional Convention election, 2017

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politics and government of
the Marshall Islands

A constitutional convention will be elected in the Marshall Islands on 21 February 2017. The convention will examine and develop proposed amendments to the Constitution, which, if approved, would then be submitted to the people by referendum.[1]

Explanation

The Marshall Islands are a parliamentary republic. A constitutional convention is being elected specifically to consider proposed constitutional amendments which have been endorsed by the Nitijeļā, the national parliament. The convention cannot propose new amendments; it can only debate those which have been approved by the parliament.[2] The proposed changes include the following:[3]

The convention will consist in forty-five members: thirty-three open to any citizen, and twelve reserved for chiefs. There are one hundred and nineteen candidates for the former, and twenty-four for the latter. All but seven of the thirty-three members of the Nitijeļā are standing for election to the convention.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "Marshalls candidates gear for Con-Con election", Marianas Variety, 23 December 2016
  2. "Marshall Is seats to be hotly contested", Radio New Zealand, 23 December 2016
  3. "At long last: Yes to Con-Con", Marshall Islands Journal, 1 October 2015
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