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Constitutional Laws of 1875 of the Third Republic, 24 and 25 February, and 16 July 1875. 20th century: [3] Constitutional Law of 1940 adopted 10 July 1940, established Vichy France. Constitutional law of 2 November 1945, organized the Provisional Government of the French Republic. Constitution of 27 October 1946, established the Fourth Republic.
An uncodified constitution is one where not all elements are written into law. Typically some elements, such as constitutional conventions, are not written into law. Such elements are almost always written down somewhere (perhaps across multiple documents and/or publications), however written in documents that are not enforceable in law.
A draft was written in 1941 and signed by Pétain in 1944, but it was never submitted or ratified. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The Ordinance of 9 August 1944 was an ordinance promulgated by the Provisional Government of the French Republic after D-Day asserting the nullity of the Constitutional Law of 1940 and other classes of law passed later by Vichy.
The Constitutional Laws of 1875 were the laws passed in France by the National Assembly between February and July 1875 which established the Third French Republic. [1] [page needed] The constitution laws could be roughly divided into three laws: The Act of 24 February 1875 – The organization of the Senate
The Constitution of the French Republic of 27 October 1946 [1] [a] was the constitution of the French Fourth Republic.. Adopted by the Constituent Assembly of 1946 [] on 29 September 1946, [7] [b] [c] and promulgated by Georges Bidault, president of the Provisional Government of the French Republic, on 27 October 1946, [3] it was published in the Official Journal of the French Republic the ...
French Constitution of 1791; French Constitution of 1793; French Constitution of 1848; French Constitution of 1852; French Constitutional Law of 1940; French constitutional laws of 1875; Fundamental laws of the Kingdom of France
The bill of 2000 is the first constitutional amendment submitted to referendum pursuant to section 89 of the Constitution. After 73% of "yes" votes on 24 September 2000, it passed on October 2. It limited the term of French presidents to five years, but was not applied to the president, Jacques Chirac, who was elected in 1995 for seven years.
Looking ahead to victory and the future reconstitution of France as a constitutional republic after the war, de Gaulle formed the Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) on 3 June 1944 [9] [10] in order to help organize the continuing Free French armed opposition to Germany, and to provide some sort of legal structure for governing ...