34 International IDEA
Federalism
In a federal country, the process for amending the constitution might have to
be designed so that it prevents any change to the distribution of powers without
the consent of the subnational units:
• Australian states have a constituent role: reflecting the federal nature of the
polity, sovereignty is shared, through the amendment procedure, between
the people of Australia as a whole and the people of each state as a unit.
Thus, an amendment to the Constitution of
Australia must be approved
not only by a nationwide popular majority but also by a majority in at
least four out of the six states.
• In some countries, the role of the subnational units may be invoked only
when the proposed amendment concerns the powers or jurisdiction of
those units or other essential parts of the constitution integral to the
federal arrangement.
In India, for example, the constitution can be
amended by a two-thirds majority of votes cast in both houses of the
central parliament, but amendments concerning the distribution of powers
between the central
government and the states, the representation of the
states in the central parliament, and the judiciary, as well as certain other
provisions, must also be approved by a majority of the state legislatures.
• In some cases, a unanimity rule may apply.
The Constitution of Canada
provides a general amending formula by which amendments must be
approved by the legislatures of two-thirds of the provinces, having between
them at least 50 per cent of the population. This rule was designed to
ensure that each of the two most populous provinces (Ontario and
Quebec) would, in most cases, have a veto over amendments. Certain
specified
amendments, however (including those relating to the status of
English and French as official languages and the composition of the
Supreme Court), require unanimous approval by all provinces.
Amendments that specifically limit the powers and rights of provinces
apply only to those provinces adopting the amendment, giving each
province an opportunity to opt out to protect its rights.
• The principle of federalism may
be an unamendable provision, protected
by a so-called eternity clause (e.g. Germany). Courts may also decide that
federalism is such an essential and defining feature of the basic structure of
the political system that it is, in principle,
beyond the reach of the
amending power (e.g. India).
For more information, see International IDEA Constitution-Building Primer
No. 10,
Constitutional Amendment Procedures.
International IDEA 35
9. Federalism and the constitution as a whole
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