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New Zealand Constitution Act 1986

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Constitution Act 1986
Parliament of New Zealand
Long title: An Act to reform the constitutional law of New Zealand, to bring together into one enactment certain provisions of constitutional significance, and to provide that the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852 of the Parliament of the United Kingdom shall cease to have effect as part of the law of New Zealand
Introduced by:
Dates
Date passed: 13 December 1986
Date of Royal Assent:
Commencement: 1 January 1987
Other legislation
Amendments: 1987, 1999, 2005
Related legislation: New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, the Electoral Act 1993
Status:
The Constitution Act of 1986 is the principal formal statement of New Zealand's Constitution.

It severed the last remaining ties of New Zealand to the British Parliament. The act repealed and replaced the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852 and the Statute of Westminster and removed the ability for the British (Westminster) parliament to pass laws for New Zealand with the consent of New Zealand's parliament, a legal possibility that had remained in theory but had only been exercised one time (the New Zealand Constitution (Amendment) Act in 1947).

Background

1984 post-election crises

After the 1984 election, there was an awkward transfer of power from the outgoing 1981 National Government to the new Labour Government in the midst of a financial crisis. Outgoing Prime Minister Robert Muldoon was initially unwilling to accept instruction from the Labour Party to devalue the currency. An Official Committee on Constitutional Reform was set up by the Labour Government to review New Zealand's constitutional law, and the Constitution Act resulted from two reports by this Committee. The issue of the transfer of power from incumbent to elect governments (and hence Prime Ministers) was not resolved by this Act however, and the transfer of executive powers remains an unwritten constitutional convention, known as the 'caretaker convention'.

Committee's report

The Official Committee on Constitutional Reform reported back to Parliament in February 1986Official Committee on Constitutional Reform: Reports Department of Justice, Wellington February 1986. The Committee recommended that New Zealand adopt an Act to restate the various constitutional provisions in a single enactment.

Parliamentary process

A Bill was introduced into Parliament in mid-1986, and was passed unaminously with the support of both Labour and National on the 13 December 1986. The act came into force on 1 January 1987. Amendments were passed in 1987 and 1999.

Effect

The Act repealed the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852, renamed the General Assembly as the "House of Representatives" and removed the right of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to legislate at the consent of the New Zealand Parliament. Australia passed the Australia Act 1986 to similar effect.

Key provisions

The Act consists of four main parts:

Part I: The Sovereign

Part II: The Executive

Part III: The Legislature

The House of Representatives Parliament Parliament and Public Finance

Part IV: The Judiciary

Entrenchment

Only section 17 of the Act (the provision relating to the term of Parliament) is entrenched, by section 268 of the Electoral Act 1993. This provision requires that any amendment to section 17 can only be made with a majority of three-quarters (75%) of all votes cast in Parliament, or by a referendum. However, section 268 of the Electoral Act 1993 itself is not entrenched - which means that Parliament could repeal the section itself, and amend section 17 of the Act. Thus, the provision is said to only be 'single entrenchment'. Some academics, including Sir Geoffrey PalmerBridled Power by Sir Geoffrey and Matthew Palmer, Oxford University Press, 2001, page 22 argue that the Act should be totally entrenched.

See also

External links

References

 


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