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Dimitrov Constitution
Constitution of Bulgaria from 1947 to 1971
Constitution of Bulgaria from 1947 to 1971
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| document_name | Dimitrov Constitution |
| image | The Constitution of the People's Republic of Bulgaria of 1947.jpg |
| orig_lang_code | bg |
| title_orig | Димитровска конституция |
| jurisdiction | Bulgaria |
| date_ratified | 4 December 1947 |
| date_effective | 6 December 1947 |
| date_repealed | 18 May 1971 |
| location_of_document | National Historical Museum |
| writer | 6th Grand National Assembly |
| supersedes | Tarnovo Constitution |
The Dimitrov Constitution was a communist state constitution. It was Bulgaria's second Constitution of Bulgaria, and was in effect from 1947 to 1971. It formed the legal basis for Communist rule in Bulgaria.
The document was named after the country's first Communist leader, Georgi Dimitrov. He guided the framing of the 1947 constitution on the model of the 1936 Soviet Constitution. The Dimitrov Constitution guaranteed citizens all manner of personal freedoms, such as equality before the law, freedom from discrimination, freedom of speech, press, and assembly, and inviolability of person, domicile, and correspondence.
The constitution set up a highly centralized governmental structure. The legislature, the National Assembly, was defined as the "highest organ of state power." It was elected for a four-year term and met in regular session twice a year. When the National Assembly was not in session, its powers were exercised by a Presidium comprising a president (a post equivalent to that of president of the republic) and 18 members. The Presidium also had the power to declare war, make peace, amend the constitution, and approve the national economic plan.
Executive authority was vested in a Council of Ministers appointed by the Presidium. Its chairman, the prime minister, was almost always the leader of the Communist Party. The judiciary was appointed by the National Assembly at all levels and lost all independence. Local government was exercised by people's councils, who elected executive committees responsible to the Presidium.
The constitution remained in effect until 1971, when it was replaced by the Zhivkov Constitution.
References
References
- Konstantinov, Emil. [http://www.cecl.gr/RigasNetwork/databank/REPORTS/r1/Bu_R1_konstantinov.htm Constitutional Foundation of Bulgaria (Historical Parallels)] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-04-01 . Rigas Network, 2002.)
- [https://www.britannica.com/place/Bulgaria/The-early-communist-era Bulgaria: The early Communist era] at [[Encyclopedia Britannica]]
- {{csref. Glenn E. Curtis
- Glenn E. Curtis
- {{csref. Glenn E. Curtis
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