Constitution of Norway

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From the creation of the Constitution.

The Constitution of Norway was first adopted on May 16, 1814 by the Norwegian Constituent Assembly at Eidsvoll (a small town north of the country's capital, Christiania), then signed and dated May 17. 17 May is now the National Day of Norway. The constitution was inspired by the United States Declaration of Independence in 1776 and the French revolution in 1789 and the subsequent U.S. and French constitutions, and was one of Europe's most radical constitutions at that time. After a short and relatively bloodless war with neighbouring Sweden, Norway in the Convention of Moss was forced to enter into a personal union with Sweden and amend its constitution accordingly November 4 1814.

Those amendments were revoked after the dissolution of the ninety-one-year-old union — the beginning of modern Norway's independence7 June 1905. Several other amendments have been adopted since 1814, the most recent on 27 June 2003. To keep the constitution as consistent as possible, changes are written in a language close to that introduced in the linguistic revision of the constitution in 1903, that is a very conservative Dano-Norwegian.

After World War II and the restoration of peace and constitutional rule, there was much debate on how to handle the events of the previous 5 years. None of this led to any changes in the constitution – it had withstood the test of hard times.

Contents

Changes in the Constitution

The document of 1814 was a product of its age, and as Norwegian democracy developed, some parts of it began to look increasingly dated. For example, the executive power, which in the Constitution is consistently attributed to the King, came increasingly to rest in his Council of State (statsråd). Similarly, the King originally had the right to appoint members of the Council, who were answerable to him alone, and they could not be chosen from the members of the Storting (Parliament). With the introduction of parliamentarism in the 1880s and early 1890s, the Council was effectively chosen by general election, in that the King appointed only members of the party of coalition having a majority in the Storting. Further, the Council became answerable to the Storting, in the sense that a failed vote of confidence would cause the government to resign. This last happened in March of 2000, when the governing Christian Democrat party felt unable to accept the introduction of gas power stations, which a majority of the Storting supported.

In addition to these changes in practice, there have been many amendments and changes to the actual text. Perhaps the most famous is the removal of the 'Jew paragraph' in 1851. Paragraph 2 originally read "The evangelical-Lutheran religion remains the public religion of the State. Those inhabitants, who confess thereto, are bound to raise their children to the same. Jesuits and monkish orders are not permitted. Jews are still prohibited from entry to the Realm." In 1851 the last sentence was removed.

Current trends

In addition to the possible changes regarding the state church, it has been proposed to change the language of the document to better reflect current usage. Several different approaches have been suggested :

  • Bring the language up to today's usage.
  • Use the 1903 standard, but correct various passages where an amendment does not really conform to that standard.
  • Revert the language to the standard of 1814; an objection to this is that most modern Norwegians would find it very difficult to read.
  • Update the language to one of the spelling reforms, either 1917, 1938, or 1959. This would still be fairly conservative language, but closer to today's speech.

Some constitutional scholars also hold that it may be necessary to change the Constitution if Norway is to enter the European Union. However, the debate on the EU has been relatively quiescent since the referendum in 1994, so such a change is not likely to occur for some years at least.


See also

External links

nb:Norges grunnlov nn:Den norske grunnlova

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