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Constitutional Court of Romania

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Constitutional Court of Romania
Curtea Constituțională a României
Established1992
LocationPalace of the Parliament, Bucharest
Composition method
Authorised byConstitution
Appeals from1992 – 2003: Parliament
2003 – present: none
Judge term length9 years
Number of positions9
Websitehttp://www.ccr.ro/
President of the Constitutional Court of Romania
CurrentlyMarian Enache
Since2022
Lead position ends2025

The Constitutional Court of Romania (Romanian: Curtea Constituțională a României) is the institution which rules on whether the laws, decrees or other bills enacted by Romanian authorities are in conformity with the Constitution.

It consists of nine members serving nine-year terms which cannot be extended, with three members each appointed by the President, the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. Three members are renewed every 3 years.

Powers

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According to the Article 146 of the Constitution, the Constitutional Court exercises the following powers:[1]

  • to adjudicate on the constitutionality of laws, before promulgation, upon notification by the President of Romania, by the President of either Chamber of Parliament, by the Government, the Supreme Court of Justice, by a number of at least 50 Deputies or at least 25 Senators, as well as, ex officio, on initiatives to revise the Constitution
  • to adjudicate on the constitutionality of the Standing Orders of Parliament, upon notification by the President of either Chamber, by a parliamentary group or a number of at least 50 Deputies or at least 25 Senators
  • to decide on exceptions brought to the Courts of law as to the unconstitutionality of laws and orders
  • to guard the observance of the procedure for the election of the President of Romania and to confirm the ballot returns
  • to ascertain the circumstances which justify the interim in the exercise of office of President of Romania, and to report its findings to Parliament and the Government
  • to give advisory opinion on the proposal to suspend the President of Romania from office
  • to guard the observance of the procedure for the organization and holding of a referendum, and to confirm its returns
  • to check on compliance with the conditions for the exercise of the legislative initiative by citizens
  • to decide on objections of unconstitutionality of a political party
  • to carry out also other duties stipulated by the organic law of the Court.
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November 28, 2024 - The Constitutional Court ordered the November 24 presidential election to recount its votes.[2]

Members

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Current structure

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Appointer Name
(Office)
Term start Term end
Senate Marian Enache [ro]

(President)

2016

(2022)

2025

(2025)

Cristian Deliorga [ro] 2019 2028
Laura-Iuliana Scântei [ro] 2022 2031
Chamber of Deputies Attila Varga [ro] 2016 2025
Gheorghe Stan [ro] 2019 2028
Dimitre-Bogdan Licu [ro] 2022 2031
President Livia-Doina Stanciu [ro] 2016 2025
Elena-Simina Tănăsescu [ro] 2019 2028
Mihaela Ciochină [ro] 2022 2031

History

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Since it was created in 1992, the Constitutional Court had the following composition.[3][4][5]

Attila VargaLivia StanciuMona PivniceruDaniel MorarStefan MineaPetre LăzăroiuMarian Enache (politician)Valer DorneanuValentin-Zoltán PuskásTudorel ToaderAugustin ZegreanToni GreblăIulia Antoanella MotocIon PredescuAcsinte GasparAspazia CojocaruNicolae CochinescuIoan VidaPetre NinosuŞerban Viorel StănoiuKozsokár GáborConstantin DoldurLucian StânguCostică BulaiNicolae PopaLucian MihaiRomul Petru VonicaFlorin Bucur VasilescuIoan MuraruIoan DeleanuVictor-Dan ZlătescuMihai ConstantinescuViorel-Mihai CiobanuAntonie IorgovanFazakás MiklosIon FilipescuVasile Gionea

Past presidents

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  • Vasile Gionea (1992–1995)
  • Ioan Muraru (1995–1998)
  • Lucian Mihai (1998–2001)
  • Nicolae Popa (2001–2004)
  • Ioan Vida (2004–2010)
  • Augustin Zegrean (2010–2016)
  • Valer Dorneanu (2016–2022)
  • Marian Enache (2022–present)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Constitution of Romania". President of Romania. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  2. ^ Ilie, Luiza (November 29, 2024). "Romania's top court orders presidential election recount". Reuters. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  3. ^ Current composition of the Constitutional Court Archived 2010-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Former judjes Archived 2010-06-29 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Adevărul
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