Rule of law. Or maybe “legal”? – Respublika.lt



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Politicians often claim that we live in a state governed by the rule of law. However, especially recently, it seems that the word “legal” needs to be quoted, because the highest law in the country, the Constitution, is ignored even by people of the highest authorities.

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Photo Photo 5

Gypsies Nausėda and Dainius Žalimas. Photo by Irmantas Sidarevičius.

There are two facts that corroborate this: 1) three judges who have served their mandate have been working in the Constitutional Court since mid-March; 2) the presidency announced the election of the presidents of the Supreme Court, although the complete composition of this court has not been formed.

What does the Constitution say about it? Here the President “appoints the Seimas to the Supreme Court justices, and after appointing all the Supreme Court justices, appoints the Seimas to appoint the Chief Justice.” After naming ALL.

“The Constitutional Court is renewed every three years for a third. Three candidates for Constitutional Court judges are appointed by the Seimas from among the candidates proposed by the President of the Republic, the President of the Seimas and the President of the Supreme Court, and the Seimas appoints them judges. “The Seimas rejected three candidacies and neither Neither the President nor the Speaker of the Seimas proposed new ones, at least the President of the Supreme Court, Sigita Rudėnait probablemente, is probably not the culprit, since she holds these positions only temporarily.

The Constitution further says that “the mandate of a Constitutional Court judge will expire when the mandate expires.” after all, more than half of the ministers have changed, although it has allowed him to continue working so that there is no chaos in the country.

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