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Constitution
of the Republic of Iceland (doc - 55kb)
I.
Article 1
Iceland is a Republic with a parliamentary government.
Article 2
Althingi and the President of Iceland jointly exercise legislative
power. The President and other governmental authorities referred to in
this Constitution and elsewhere in the law exercise executive power.
Judges exercise judicial power.
II.
Article 3
The President of Iceland shall be elected by the people.
Article 4
Any person who is at least thirty-five years of age and fulfils the
requirements necessary to vote in elections to Althingi, with the
exception of the residency requirement, is eligible to be elected
President.
Article 5
The President shall be elected by direct, secret ballot of those who
are eligible to vote in elections to Althingi. A presidential
candidate shall be proposed by not less than 1500 voters and not more
than 3000. The candidate, if there is more than one, who receives the
most votes is duly elected President. If there is only one candidate,
he is duly elected without a vote.
Further provision for the candidature and election of the President
shall be made by law, and it may be provided that a specific number of
proposers shall reside in each quarter of the country in proportion to
the number of voters there.
Article 6
The President's term of office begins on the 1st of August and ends on
the 31st of July four years later. The election of President takes
place in June or July of the year in which a term of office expires.
Article 7
If the President dies or resigns prior to the expiry of his term of
office, a new President shall be elected for a period ending on the
31st of July of the fourth year from the election.
Article 8
If the Office of President of the Republic becomes vacant or if the
President is unable to perform his duties due to a stay abroad,
illness, or other reasons, the Prime Minister, the President of
Althingi and the President of the Supreme Court shall exercise
presidential authority. The President of Althingi shall preside at
their meetings. In a divergence of opinion among them, the majority
shall prevail.
Article 9
The President of the Republic may not be a Member of Althingi or
accept paid employment in the interest of any public institution or
private enterprise.
Disbursements from State funds to the President or those who exercise
presidential authority shall be established by law. These
disbursements to the President may not be reduced during his term of
office.
Article 10
On assuming office, the President shall take an oath or pledge to
uphold the Constitution. Two identical originals shall be executed of
this oath or pledge. One shall be kept by Althingi and the other by
the National Archives.
Article 11
The President of the Republic may not be held accountable for
executive acts. The same applies to those who exercise presidential
authority.
The President may not be prosecuted on a criminal charge except with
the consent of Althingi.
The President may be removed from office before his term expires if
approved by a majority in a plebiscite called pursuant to a resolution
adopted by three-fourths of the Members of Althingi. This plebiscite
shall be held within two months from the date of adoption by Althingi
of the resolution. The President shall not perform his duties from the
time the resolution is adopted by Althingi until the results of the
plebiscite are known.
If the resolution by Althingi is not approved in the plebiscite,
Althingi shall be immediately dissolved and new elections called.
Article 12
The President of the Republic shall reside in or near Reykjavik.
Article 13
The President entrusts his authority to Ministers.
The seat of Government is in Reykjavik.
Article 14
Ministers are accountable for all executive acts. The accountability
of the Ministers is established by law. Althingi may impeach Ministers
on account of their official acts. The Court of Impeachment has
competence in such cases.
Article 15
The President appoints Ministers and discharges them. He determines
their number and assignments.
Article 16
The State Council is composed of the President of the Republic and the
Ministers and is presided over by the President.
Laws and important government measures shall be submitted to the
President in the State Council.
Article 17
Ministerial meetings shall be held in order to discuss new legislative
proposals and important State matters. Furthermore, ministerial
meetings shall be held if a Minister wishes to raise a matter there.
The meetings shall be presided over by the Minister called upon by the
President of the Republic to do so, who is designated Prime Minister.
Article 18
The Minister who has signed a measure shall, as a rule, submit it to
the President.
Article 19
The signature of the President validates a legislative act or
government measure when countersigned by a Minister.
Article 20
The President appoints public officials as provided by law.
No person may hold public office unless he has Icelandic nationality.
Each public official shall take an oath or pledge to uphold the
Constitution.
The President may remove from office any official whom he has
appointed.
The President may transfer officials from one office to another
provided that their official remuneration is not reduced, and that
they have an option between such transfer and retirement with a
pension, or old-age benefits, as prescribed by law.
Certain categories of officials, in addition to those mentioned in
Article 61, may be exempted by law from this provision.
Article 21
The President of the Republic concludes treaties with other States.
Unless approved by Althingi, he may not make such treaties if they
entail renouncement of, or servitude on, territory or territorial
waters, or if they require changes in the State system.
Article 22
The President of the Republic shall convene Althingi not later than
ten weeks after general elections. The President opens regular
sessions of Althingi each year.
Article 23
The President of the Republic may adjourn sessions of Althingi for a
limited period of time, but not exceeding two weeks nor more than once
a year. Althingi may, however, authorize the President to deviate from
this provision.
If sessions of Althingi have been adjourned, the President of the
Republic may nevertheless convene Althingi as deemed necessary.
Moreover, the President, is obliged to do so upon the request of a
majority of the Members of Althingi.
Article 24
The President of the Republic may dissolve Althingi. A new election
must take place within 45 days from the announcement of the
dissolution. Althingi shall convene not later than ten weeks after its
dissolution. Members of Althingi shall retain their mandate until
Election Day.
Article 25
The President of the Republic may have bills and draft resolutions
submitted to Althingi.
Article 26
If Althingi has passed a bill, it shall be submitted to the President
of the Republic for confirmation not later than two weeks after it has
been passed. Such confirmation gives it the force of law. If the
President rejects a bill, it shall nevertheless become valid but
shall, as soon as circumstances permit, be submitted to a vote by
secret ballot of all those eligible to vote, for approval or
rejection. The law shall become void if rejected, but otherwise
retains its force.
Article 27
All laws shall be published. The form of publication and the
implementation of laws shall be in accordance with law.
Article 28
In case of urgency, the President may issue provisional laws when
Althingi is not in session. Such laws must not, however, be contrary
to the Constitution. They shall always be submitted to Althingi as
soon as it convenes.
If Althingi does not approve a provisional law, or if it does not
complete its consideration of the law within six weeks after
convening, the law shall become void.
A provisional budget may not be issued if Althingi has passed the
budget for the fiscal year.
Article 29
The President may decide that the prosecution for an offense be
discontinued if there are strong reasons therefor. The President
grants pardon and amnesty. However, he may not absolve a Minister from
prosecution or from a punishment imposed by the Court of Impeachment,
unless approved by Althingi.
Article 30
The President, or other governmental authorities entrusted by the
President, grants exemptions from laws in accordance with established
practice.
III.
Article 31
Althingi shall be composed of 63 members elected by the people by
secret ballot on the basis of proportional representation for a term
of four years.
Electoral districts shall be no fewer than six and no more than seven
in number. Their boundaries shall be defined by law; however, the
National Election Board may define the boundaries of the electoral
districts in Reykjavik and its vicinity.
For each respective electoral district, six seats shall be allocated
in accordance with the outcome of elections within that district. The
number of parliamentary seats for each electoral district shall in
other respects be defined by law, subject however to the provisions of
the fifth paragraph.
Seats other than those allocated to the electoral districts shall be
distributed within each respective electoral district with the purpose
of providing individual political parties with representation
reflecting to the fullest possible extent each party's total number of
votes. However, only political parties having received at least five
per cent of all valid votes cast nation-wide shall be eligible for
such distribution.
If the number of voters on the voting register represented by each
parliamentary seat, allocated or distributed, becomes in one electoral
district one half of the number represented by each parliamentary seat
in another electoral district, the National Election Board shall
revise the number of seats representing each electoral district with
the aim of reducing this difference. This shall be provided for in
further detail by law.
Provisions of law relating to election district boundaries and the
methods of allocating seats in Parliament can only be amended by a
two-thirds majority in Althingi.
Article 32
Sessions of Althingi are held in one chamber.
Article 33
All persons who, on the date of an election, are 18 years of age or
older and have Icelandic nationality have the right to vote in
elections to Althingi. Permanent domicile in Iceland, on the date of
an election, is also a requirement for voting, unless exceptions from
this rule are stipulated in the law on elections to Althingi.
Further provisions regarding elections to Althingi shall be laid down
in the law on elections.
Article 34
Every national having the right to vote in elections to Althingi and
an unblemished reputation is eligible to be elected to Althingi.
Supreme Court Judges, however, are not eligible.
IV.
Article 35
Althingi shall convene for a regular session every year on the 1st of
October or, if the day falls on an official holiday, on the following
weekday, and continue in session until the same date the following
year, unless the election period of Members of Althingi has elapsed
earlier or Althingi has been dissolved.
The opening date of the regular session of Althingi may be changed by
law.
Article 36
Althingi is inviolate. No person may disturb its peace or violate its
freedom.
Article 37
Althingi shall normally convene in Reykjavik, but under special
circumstances the President of the Republic may order that Althingi
convene at another place in Iceland.
Article 38
Members of Althingi and Ministers are entitled to introduce bills and
draft resolutions.
Article 39
Althingi may appoint committees of its Members in order to investigate
important matters of public interest. Althingi may grant authority to
such committees to request reports, oral or written, from officials as
well as from individuals.
Article 40
No tax may be imposed, altered or abolished except by law. Nor may
loans, indebting the State, be taken or any real estate belonging to
the State or the use thereof sold or in any other way disposed of,
except by authority in law.
Article 41
No disbursement may be made unless authorized in the budget or the
supplementary budget.
Article 42
A budget proposal for the coming fiscal year, containing a report on
the revenue and expenditure of the State, shall be submitted to each
regular session of Althingi upon it being convened.
Article 43
The financial accounts of the State, its institutions and
administrative bodies, shall be subject to an audit by, or under the
supervision of Althingi, as provided by law.
Article 44
No bill may be passed until it has received three readings in Althingi.
Article 45
Regular elections to Althingi shall take place not later than at the
end of the electoral term. The beginning and end of the electoral term
is on the same day of the week in a month, counting from the beginning
of the month.
Article 46
Althingi decides whether its Members are legally elected and also
whether a Member has lost eligibility for election to Althingi.
Article 47
Each new Member of Althingi shall take a pledge to uphold the
Constitution when his election has been approved.
Article 48
Members of Althingi are bound solely by their conviction and not by
any instructions from their constituents.
Article 49
No Member of Althingi may be subjected to custody on remand during a
session of Althingi without the consent of Althingi, nor may a
criminal action be brought against him unless he is caught in the act
of committing a crime.
No Member of Althingi may be held accountable outside Althingi for
statements made by him in Althingi, except with the consent of
Althingi.
Article 50
If a Member of Althingi loses eligibility for election to Althingi, he
forfeits those rights that the election brought him.
Article 51
Ministers are entitled to a seat in Althingi and, by virtue of their
office, have the right to participate in its debates as often as they
may desire, but they must observe the rules of procedure. They have
the right to vote only if they are at the same time Members of
Althingi.
Article 52
Althingi elects a President, who presides over its proceedings.
Article 53
Althingi may not take a decision unless a quorum of more than half of
its Members are present at the meeting and take part in the voting.
Article 54
Each Member of Althingi may request, subject to the permission of
Althingi, information from a Minister or an answer regarding a public
matter, by tabling a question or requesting a report.
Article 55
Althingi may not admit for consideration any matter unless introduced
by one of its Members or a Minister.
Article 56
Should Althingi not find cause to take a decision on a given matter it
can refer it to a Minister.
Article 57
Meetings of Althingi shall be held in public. Nevertheless, the
President of Althingi, or the quorum stipulated by the rules of
procedure, may request that all those not Members of Althingi be
excluded. The meeting shall then decide whether the matter shall be
debated in a public or a closed session.
Article 58
The rules of procedure of Althingi shall be determined by law.
V.
Article 59
The organization of the judiciary can only be established by law.
Article 60
Judges settle all disputes regarding the competence of the
authorities. No one seeking a ruling thereon can, however, temporarily
evade obeying an order from the authorities by submitting the matter
for a judicial decision.
Article 61
In the performance of their official duties, judges shall be guided
solely by the law. Those judges who do not also have administrative
functions cannot be discharged from office except by a judicial
decision, nor may they be transferred to another office against their
will, except in the event of re-organization of the judiciary.
However, a judge who has reached the age of 65 may be released from
office, but Judges of the Supreme Court shall not lose any of their
salary.
VI.
Article 62
The Evangelical Lutheran Church shall be the State Church in Iceland
and, as such, it shall be supported and protected by the State.
This may be amended by law.
Article 63
All persons have the right to form religious associations and to
practice their religion in conformity with their individual
convictions. Nothing may however be preached or practiced which is
prejudicial to good morals or public order.
Article 64
No one may lose any of his civil or national rights on account of his
religion, nor may anyone refuse to perform any generally applicable
civil duty on religious grounds.
Everyone shall be free to remain outside religious associations. No
one shall be obliged to pay any personal dues to any religious
association of which he is not a member.
A person who is not a member of any religious association shall pay to
the University of Iceland the dues that he would have had to pay to
such an association, if he had been a member. This may be amended by
law.
VII.
Article 65
Everyone shall be equal before the law and enjoy human rights
irrespective of sex, religion, opinion, national origin, race, colour,
property, birth or other status.
Men and women shall enjoy equal rights in all respects.
Article 66
No one may be deprived of Icelandic citizenship. Loss of citizenship
may, however, be provided for by law, in the event a person accepts
citizenship in another State. An alien can only be granted Icelandic
citizenship according to law.
An Icelandic citizen cannot be barred from entering Iceland nor
expelled there from. The rights of aliens to enter and reside in
Iceland, and the reasons for which they may be expelled, shall be laid
down by law.
No one may be barred from leaving Iceland except by judicial decision.
A person may however be prevented from leaving Iceland by lawful
arrest.
Every person lawfully residing in Iceland shall be free to choose his
residence and shall enjoy freedom of travel subject to any limitations
laid down by law.
Article 67
No one may be deprived of his liberty except as permitted by law.
Any person deprived of his liberty shall be entitled to be informed
promptly of the reasons for this measure.
Any person arrested by reason of suspicion of criminal conduct shall
be brought before a judge without undue delay. If he is not released
at once, the judge shall, within 24 hours, issue a reasoned decision
on whether he shall be detained on remand. Detention on remand may
only be ordered due to a charge subject to heavier sanctions than
fines or punitive custody. The right of a person detained on remand to
refer the decision on his remand to a superior court shall be
guaranteed by law. A person shall never be detained on remand for
longer than necessary; if the judge deems that he may be released on
bail the amount of bail shall be determined by a judicial order.
Any person deprived of his liberty for other reasons shall be entitled
to have the legality of the measure reviewed by a court as soon as
possible. If his deprivation of liberty proves to have been unlawful
he shall be released forthwith.
Any person deprived of his liberty without valid reason shall have a
right to compensation.
Article 68
No one may be subjected to torture or any other inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment.
No one shall be required to perform compulsory labour.
Article 69
No one may be subjected to punishment unless found guilty of conduct
that constituted a criminal offence according to the law at the time
when it was committed, or is totally analogous to such conduct. The
sanctions may not be more severe than the law permitted at the time of
commission.
Death penalty may never be stipulated by law.
Article 70
Everyone shall, for the determination of his rights and obligations or
in the event of a criminal charge against him, be entitled, following
a fair trial and within a reasonable time, to the resolution of an
independent and impartial court of law. A hearing by a court of law
shall take place in public, except if the judge decides otherwise as
provided for by law in the interest of morals, public order, the
security of the State or the interests of the parties.
Everyone charged with criminal conduct shall be presumed innocent
until proven guilty.
Article 71
Everyone shall enjoy freedom from interference with privacy, home, and
family life.
Bodily or personal search or a search of a person's premises or
possessions may only be conducted in accordance with a judicial
decision or a statutory law provision. This shall also apply to the
examination of documents and mail, communications by telephone and
other means, and to any other comparable interference with a person's
right to privacy.
Notwithstanding the provisions of the first paragraph above, freedom
from interference with privacy, home and family life may be otherwise
limited by statutory provisions if this is urgently necessary for the
protection of the rights of others.
Article 72
The right of private ownership shall be inviolate. No one may be
obliged to surrender his property unless required by public interests.
Such a measure shall be provided for by law, and full compensation
shall be paid.
The right of foreign parties to own real property interests or shares
in business enterprises in Iceland may be limited by law.
Article 73
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and belief.
Everyone shall be free to express his thoughts, but shall also be
liable to answer for them in court. The law may never provide for
censorship or other similar limitations to freedom of expression.
Freedom of expression may only be restricted by law in the interests
of public order or the security of the State, for the protection of
health or morals, or for the protection of the rights or reputation of
others, if such restrictions are deemed necessary and in agreement
with democratic traditions.
Article 74
Associations may be formed without prior permission for any lawful
purpose, including political associations and trade unions. An
association may not be dissolved by administrative decision. The
activities of an association found to be in furtherance of unlawful
objectives may however be enjoint, in which case legal action shall be
brought without undue delay for a judgment dissolving the association.
No one may be obliged to be a member of any association. Membership of
an association may however be made obligatory by law if this is
necessary in order to enable an association to discharge its functions
in the public interest or on account of the rights of others.
People are free to assemble unarmed. Public gatherings may be attended
by police. Public gatherings in the open may be banned if it is feared
that riots may ensue.
Article 75
Everyone is free to pursue the occupation of his choosing. This right
may however be restricted by law, if such restriction is required with
regard to the public interest.
The right of people to negotiate terms of employment and other labour-related
matters shall be regulated by law.
Article 76
The law shall guarantee for everyone the necessary assistance in case
of sickness, invalidity, infirmity by reason of old age, unemployment
and similar circumstances.
The law shall guarantee for everyone suitable general education and
tuition.
For children, the law shall guarantee the protection and care which is
necessary for their well-being.
Article 77
Matters concerning taxes shall be regulated by law. The power to
decide whether to levy a tax, change a tax or abolish a tax may not be
vested in administrative authorities.
No tax may be levied unless the levy was permitted by law at the time
when the facts occurred on which the tax liability is based.
Article 78
The municipalities shall manage their affairs independently as laid
down by law.
The income sources of the municipalities, and the right of the
municipalities to decide whether and how to use their sources of
income, shall be regulated by law.
Article 79
Proposals to amend or supplement this Constitution may be introduced
at regular as well as extraordinary sessions of Althingi. If the
proposal is adopted, Althingi shall immediately be dissolved and a
general election held. If Althingi then passes the resolution
unchanged, it shall be confirmed by the President of the Republic and
come into force as constitutional law.
If Althingi passes an amendment to the status of the Church under
Article 62, it shall be submitted to a vote for approval or rejection
by secret ballot of all those eligible to vote.
Translation from Icelandic)
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