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Ségolène Royal
Argues For Randomly Selected Citizens to Advise on New French
Constitution
by
David Litvak
The socialist candidate in the
French presidential election, Ségolène Royal, proposed to use randomly
selected citizens, along with elected officials, as members of
consultative Constitutional Commission. The mandate of this body
would be no less than advise the Presidency on a referendum question
ushering in a new Sixth Republic of France.
This Committee would be comprised of
constitutional scholars, congressmen, local and regional executives,
as well as citizens drawn by lot from electoral registries. The
Commission would have an advisory role and help draft a referendum
proposal to put to the people of that nation to change the
Constitution and declare The Sixth Republic. The present Constitution
in France was initiated in 1958.
Proportional Representation Pushed by Two Candidates
One of the changes that Royal would
approve of is to change the electoral system to include a significant
“dose of proportional representation” in legislative elections.
Another contender in the French election, centrist François Bayrou,
has also mentioned he would try toalter the electoral system to
include proportional representation. He, too, would like to initiate a
Sixth Republic.
Ségolène Royal is trailing Nicolas Sarkozy in the
polls, while François Bayrou is the third contender. Noticeably,
however, polls give the presidency to Bayrou against both Royal and
Sarkozy if he manages to reach the two candidate second round of
voting. The first round of voting will be on April 22nd 2007. The
second round is scheduled for May 6th.
Citizens’ Juries Still on
Royal’s Agenda
Ségolène Royal , who is making a name
for herself in European politics by suggesting a number of new
“participatory democracy” proposals, continues to advocate her ideas
on also using Citizen Juries. In her view, the mandate of citizens’
would be to keep a check on government, without however having any
formal sanctioning power..
Even though the proposal has been
attacked from both sides of the electoral spectrum, Royal is sticking
to her guns despite sinking some in public opinion polls on all the
candidates. The reason for this is that Royal states that
“authenticity commanded her to keep the proposal”, despite heavy
resistance from her opponents, and even among some in her own party.
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