Bulgaria - Constitution
{ Adopted on: 12 July 1991 }
Preamble
We, the Members of the Seventh Grand National Assembly, guided by our desire to express the will of the people of Bulgaria, by pledging our loyalty to the universal human values of liberty, peace, humanism, equality, justice and tolerance; by elevating as the uppermost principle the rights, dignity and security of the individual; in awareness of our irrevocable duty to guard the national and state integrity of Bulgaria, hereby promulgate our resolve to create a democratic, law-governed and social state, by establishing this Constitution.
Chapter One Fundamental Principles
Article 1 [State]
(1) Bulgaria is a republic with a parliamentary form of government.
(2) The entire power of the state shall derive from the people. The people shall
exercise this power directly and through the bodies established by this Constitution.
(3) No part of the people, no political party nor any other organization, state
institution, or individual shall usurp the expression of the popular sovereignty.
Article 2 [Territorial Integrity]
(1) The Republic of Bulgaria is an integral state with local self-government.
No autonomous territorial formations shall exist.
(2) The territorial integrity of the Republic of Bulgaria is inviolable.
Article 3 [Language]
Bulgarian is the official language of the Republic.
Article 4 [Rule of Law, Human Rights]
(1) The Republic of Bulgaria is a law-governed state. It is governed by the
Constitution and the laws of the country.
(2) The Republic of Bulgaria shall guarantee the life, dignity, and rights of
the individual and shall create conditions conducive to the free development
of the individual and the civil society.
Article 5 [Supreme Law]
(1) The Constitution is the supreme law, and no other law shall contravene
it.
(2) The provisions of the Constitution shall apply directly.
(3) No one shall be convicted for action or inaction which at the time it was
committed did not constitute a crime.
(4) Any international instruments which have been ratified by the constitutionally
established procedure, promulgated, and come into force with respect to the
Republic of Bulgaria, shall be considered part of the domestic legislation of
the country. They shall supersede any domestic legislation stipulating otherwise.
(5) All legislative acts shall be promulgated and shall come into force three
days after the date of their promulgation unless otherwise envisaged by the
acts themselves.
Article 6 [Human Dignity, Freedom, Equality]
(1) All persons are born free and equal in dignity and rights.
(2) All citizens shall be equal before the law. There shall be no privileges
or restriction of rights on the grounds of race, nationality, ethnic self-identity,
sex, origin, religion, education, opinion, political affiliation, personal or
social status, or property status.
Article 7 [State Liability]
The state shall be held liable for any damages caused by illegitimate rulings
or acts on the part of its agencies and officials.
Article 8 [Three Powers]
The power of the state is divided between a legislative, an executive, and a
judicial branch.
Article 9 [Armed Forces]
The armed forces shall guarantee the sovereignty, security, and independence
of the county and shall defend its territorial integrity.
Article 10 [Elections, Suffrage]
All elections and national and local referendums shall be held on the basis
of universal, equal, and direct suffrage by secret ballot.
Article 11 [Political Parties]
(1) Politics in the Republic of Bulgaria shall be founded on the principle
of political plurality.
(2) No political party or ideology shall be proclaimed or affirmed as a party
or ideology of the state.
(3) All parties shall facilitate the formation and expression of the citizens'
political will. The procedure applying to the formation and dissolution of political
parties and the conditions pertaining to their activity is established by law.
(4) There shall be no political parties on ethnic, racial, or religious lines,
nor parties which seek the violent usurpation of state power.
Article 12 [Citizens' Associations]
(1) The associations of citizens shall serve to meet and safeguard their interests.
(2) Citizens' associations, including the trade unions, shall not pursue any
political objectives, nor shall they engage in any political activity which
is in the domain of the political parties.
Article 13 [Religion]
(1) The practicing of any religion is free.
(2) The religious institutions shall be separate from the state.
(3) Eastern Orthodox Christianity is considered the traditional religion in
the Republic of Bulgaria.
(4) Religious institutions and communities and religious beliefs shall not be
used to political ends.
Article 14 [Family]
The family, motherhood, and childhood shall enjoy the protection of the state
and society.
Article 15 [Nature]
The Republic of Bulgaria shall ensure the protection and reproduction of the
environment, the conservation of living nature in all its variety, and the sensible
utilization of the country's natural and other resources.
Article 16 [Labor]
Labor is guaranteed and protected by law.
Article 17 [Property]
(1) The right to property and inheritance shall guaranteed and protected by
law.
(2) Property is private and public.
(3) Private property is inviolable.
(4) The regime applying to the different units of state and municipal property
is established by law.
(5) Forcible expropriation of property in the name of state and municipal needs
shall be effected only by virtue of a law, provided that these needs cannot
be otherwise met, and after fair compensation has been ensured in advance.
Article 18 [State Property]
(1) The state shall enjoy exclusive ownership rights over the nethers of the
earth; the coastal beaches; the national thoroughfares, as well as over waters,
forests, and parks of national importance, and the natural and archaeological
reserves established by law.
(2) The state shall exercise sovereign rights in prospecting developing, utilizing,
protecting, and managing the continental shelf and the exclusive off-shore economic
zone, and the biological, mineral, and energy resources therein.
(3) The state shall exercise sovereign rights with respect to radio frequencies
and the geostationary orbital positions assigned by international instruments
to the Republic of Bulgaria.
(4) A state monopoly is establishable by law over railway transport, the national
postal and telecommunication networks, the use of nuclear energy, the manufacturing
of radioactive products, armaments, explosives, and powerful toxic substances.
(5) The conditions and procedure by which the state shall grant concessions
over units of property and licenses for the activities enumerated in the preceding
two paragraphs shall be established by law.
(6) The state shall utilize and manage all the state's assets to the benefit
of citizens and society.
Article 19 [Economic Activity]
(1) The economy of the Republic of Bulgaria shall be based on free economic
initiative.
(2) The state shall establish and guarantee equal legal conditions for economic
activity to all citizens and corporate entities by preventing any abuse of a
monopoly status and unfair competition and by protecting the consumer.
(3) All investments and economic activity by Bulgarian and foreign persons and
corporate entities shall enjoy the protection of the law.
(4) The law shall establish conditions favorable to the setting up of cooperatives
and other forms of association of citizens and corporate entities in the pursuit
of economic and social prosperity.
Article 20 [Balanced Development]
The state shall establish conditions favorable to the balanced development of
the different regions of the country and shall assist the territorial bodies
and activities through its fiscal, credit, and investment policies.
Article 21 [Land]
(1) Land, as a chief national asset, shall enjoy particular protection on the
part of the state and society.
(2) Arable land shall be used for agricultural purposes only. Any change in
purposes shall be allowed only in exceptional circumstances, when necessity
has been proven, and on terms and by a procedure established by law.
Article 22 [Foreigners Clause]
(1) No foreign physical person or foreign legal entity shall acquire ownership
over land, except through legal inheritance. Ownership thus acquired shall be
duly transferred.
(2) A foreign physical person or foreign legal entity is free to acquire user
rights, building rights, and other real rights on terms established by law.
Article 23 [Education, Culture]
The state shall establish conditions favorable to the free development of science,
education, and the arts, and shall assist that development. It shall organize
the conservation of all national monuments of history and culture.
Article 24 [Foreign Policy]
(1) The Republic of Bulgaria shall conduct its foreign policy in accordance
with the principles and norms of international law.
(2) The foreign policy of the Republic of Bulgaria shall have as its uppermost
objective the national security and independence of the country, the well-being
and the fundamental rights and freedoms of the Bulgarian citizens, and the promotion
of a just international order.
Chapter Two Fundamental Rights and Obligations of Citizens
Article 25 [Citizenship]
(1) A Bulgarian citizen is anyone born of at least one parent holding a Bulgarian
citizenship, or born on the territory of the Republic of Bulgaria, should he
not be entitled to any other citizenship by virtue of origin. Bulgarian citizenship
shall further be acquirable through naturalization.
(2) A person of Bulgarian origin shall acquire Bulgarian citizenship through
a facilitated procedure.
(3) No one shall be deprived of a Bulgarian citizenship acquired by birth.
(4) No citizen of the Republic of Bulgaria shall be expatriated or extradited
to another state.
(5) Any Bulgarian citizen abroad shall be accorded the protection of the Republic
of Bulgaria.
(6) The conditions and procedure for the acquiring, preservation, or loss of
Bulgarian citizenship shall be established by law.
Article 26 [Constitutional Rights]
(1) Irrespective of where they are, all citizens of the Republic of Bulgaria
shall be vested with all rights and obligations proceeding from this Constitution.
(2) Foreigners residing in the Republic of Bulgaria shall be vested with all
rights and obligations proceeding from this Constitution, except those rights
and obligations for which a Bulgarian citizenship is required by this Constitution
or by another law.
Article 27 [Extradition, Asylum]
(1) Foreigners residing legally in the country shall not be expelled or extradited
to another state against their will, except in accordance with the provisions
and the procedures established by law.
(2) The Republic of Bulgaria shall grant asylum to foreigners persecuted for
their opinions or activity in the defence of internationally recognized rights
and freedoms.
(3) The conditions and procedure for the granting of asylum shall be established
by law.
Article 28 [Life]
Everyone shall have the right to life. Any attack upon a human
life shall be punished as a most severe crime.
Article 29 [Torture]
(1) No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading
treatment, or to forcible assimilation.
(2) No one shall be subjected to medical, scientific, or other experimentation
without his voluntary written consent.
Article 30 [Personal Freedom and Integrity, Defence]
(1) Everyone is entitled to personal freedom and inviolability.
(2) No one shall be detained or subjected to inspection, search or any other
infringement of his personal inviolability except on the conditions and in a
manner established by law.
(3) The state authorities shall be free to detain a citizen only in the urgent
circumstances expressly stipulated by law, and shall immediately advise the
judicial authorities accordingly. The judicial authorities shall rule on the
legality of a detention within the next 24 hours.
(4) Everyone is entitled to legal counsel from the moment of detention or from
the moment of being charged.
(5) Everyone is entitled to meet his legal counsel in private. The confidentiality
of such communication shall be inviolable.
Article 31 [Criminal Trials]
(1) Anyone charged with a crime shall be brought before a court within the
time established by law.
(2) No one shall be forced to plead guilty, and no one shall be convicted solely
by virtue of a confession.
(3) A defendant shall be considered innocent until proven otherwise by a final
verdict.
(4) The rights of a defendant shall not be restricted beyond what is necessary
for the purposes of a fair trial.
(5) Prisoners shall be kept in conditions conducive to the exercise of those
of their fundamental rights which are not restricted by virtue of their sentence.
(6) Prison sentences shall be served only at the facilities established by law.
(7) There shall be no limitation to the prosecution and the execution of a sentence
for crimes against peace and humanity.
Article 32 [Privacy]
(1) The privacy of citizens is inviolable. Everyone is entitled to protection
against any illegal interference in his private or family affairs and against
encroachments on his honor, dignity, and reputation.
(2) No one shall be followed, photographed, filmed, recorded, or subjected to
any other similar activity without his knowledge or despite his express disapproval,
except when such actions are permitted by law.
Article 33 [Home]
(1) The home is inviolable. No one shall enter or stay inside a home without
its occupant's consent, except in the cases expressly stipulated by law.
(2) Entering a home or staying inside without the consent of its occupant or
without the judicial authorities' permission shall be allowed only for the purposes
of preventing an immediately impending crime or a crime in progress, for the
capture of a criminal, or in extreme necessity.
Article 34 [Confidential Communication]
(1) The freedom and confidentiality of correspondence and all other communications
is inviolable.
(2) Exceptions to this provision shall be allowed only with the permission of
the judicial authorities for the purpose of discovering or preventing a grave
crime.
Article 35 [Residence, Movement]
(1) Everyone is free to choose a place of residence and has the right to movement
on the territory of the country and to leave the country. This right shall be
restricted only by virtue of a law in the name of national security, public
health, and the rights and freedoms of other citizens.
(2) Every Bulgarian citizen shall have the right to return to the country.
Article 36 [Language]
(1) The study and use of the Bulgarian language is a right and obligation of
every Bulgarian citizen.
(2) Citizens whose mother tongue is not Bulgarian shall have the right to study
and use their own language alongside the compulsory study of the Bulgarian language.
(3) The situations in which only the official language shall be used shall be
established by law.
Article 37 [Freedom of Religion and Belief]
(1) The freedom of conscience, the freedom of thought, and the choice of religion
and of religious or atheistic views are inviolable. The state shall assist the
maintenance of tolerance and respect among the believers from different denominations,
and among believers and non-believers.
(2) The freedom of conscience and religion shall not be practiced to the detriment
of national security, public order, public health and morals, or of the rights
and freedoms of others.
Article 38 [Freedom of Opinion]
No one shall be persecuted or restricted in his rights because of his views,
nor shall be obligated or forced to provide information about his own or another
person's views.
Article 39 [Expression]
(1) Everyone is entitled to express an opinion or to publicize it through words,
written or oral, sound, or image, or in any other way.
(2) This right shall not be used to the detriment of the rights and reputation
of others, or for the incitement of a forcible change of the constitutionally
established order, the perpetration of a crime, or the incitement of enmity
or violence against anyone.
Article 40 [Press, Media]
(1) The press and the other mass information media are free and shall not be
subjected to censorship.
(2) An injunction on or a confiscation of printed matter or another information
medium shall be allowed only through an act of the judicial authorities in the
case of an encroachment on public decency or incitement of a forcible change
of the constitutionally established order, the perpetration of a crime, or the
incitement of violence against anyone. An injunction suspension shall lose force
if not followed by a confiscation within 24 hours.
Article 41 [Information]
(1) Everyone is entitled to seek, obtain, and disseminate information. This
right shall not be exercised to the detriment of the rights and reputation of
others, or to the detriment of national security, public order, public health,
and morality.
(2) Citizens shall be entitled to obtain information from state bodies and agencies
on any matter of legitimate interest to them which is not a state or official
secret and does not affect the rights of others.
Article 42 [Electoral Rights]
(1) Every citizen above the age of 18, with the exception of those placed under
judicial interdiction or serving a prison sentence, is free to elect state and
local authorities and vote in referendums.
(2) The organization and procedure for the holding of elections and referendums
shall be established by law.
Article 43 [Assembly]
(1) Citizens shall have the right to peaceful and unarmed assembly for meetings
and manifestations.
(2) The procedure for the organizing and holding of meetings and manifestations
shall be established by law.
(3) No notice to the municipal authorities shall be required for meetings held
indoors.
Article 44 [Association]
(1) Citizens shall be free to associate.
(2) No organization shall act to the detriment of the country's sovereignty
and national integrity, or the unity of the nation, nor shall it incite racial,
national, ethnic, or religious enmity or an encroachment on the rights and freedoms
of citizens; no organization shall establish clandestine or paramilitary structures
or shall seek to attain its aims through violence.
(3) The law shall establish which organizations shall be subject to registration,
the procedure for their termination, and their relationships with the state.
Article 45 [Petition]
Citizens have the right to lodge complaints, proposals, and petitions with the
state authorities.
Article 46 [Matrimony]
(1) Matrimony is a free union between a man and a woman. Only a civil marriage
shall be legal.
(2) Spouses shall have equal rights and obligations in matrimony and the family.
(3) The form of a marriage, the conditions and procedure for its conclusion
and termination, and all private and material relations between the spouses
shall be established by law.
Article 47 [Parents, Children]
(1) The raising and upbringing of children until they come of legal age shall
be a right and obligation of their parents and shall be assisted by the state.
(2) Mothers shall be the object of the state and shall be guaranteed prenatal
and postnatal leave, free obstetric care, alleviated working conditions, and
other social assistance.
(3) Children born out of wedlock shall enjoy equal rights with those born in
wedlock.
(4) Abandoned children shall enjoy the protection of the state and society.
(5) The conditions and procedure for the restriction or suspension of parental
rights shall be established by law.
Article 48 [Right to Work]
(1) Citizens shall have the right to work. The state shall take care to provide
conditions for the exercising of this right.
(2) The state shall create conditions favorable to the exercise of the right
to work by the physically or mentally handicapped.
(3) Everyone is free to choose an occupation and place of work.
(4) No one shall be compelled to do forced labor.
(5) Workers and employees shall be entitled to healthy and non-hazardous working
conditions, to guaranteed minimum pay and remuneration for the actual work performed,
and to rest and leave, in accordance with conditions and procedures
established by law.
Article 49 [Unions]
(1) Workers and employees shall be free to form trade union organizations and
alliances in defence of their interests related to work and social security.
(2) Employers shall be free to associate in defence of their economic interests.
Article 50 [Strike]
Workers and employees shall have the right to strike in defence of their collective
economic and social interests. This right shall be exercised in accordance with
conditions and procedures established by law.
Article 51 [Welfare]
(1) Citizens shall have the right to social security and welfare aid.
(2) The state shall provide social security for the temporarily unemployed in
accordance with conditions and procedures established by law.
(3) The aged without relatives and unable to support themselves, as well as
the physically and mentally handicapped shall enjoy the special protection of
the state and society.
Article 52 [Health Care]
(1) Citizens shall have the right to medical insurance guaranteeing them affordable
medical care, and to free medical care in accordance with conditions and procedures
established by law.
(2) Citizens' medical care shall be financed from the state budget, by employers,
through private and collective health-insurance schemes, and from other sources
in accordance with conditions and procedures established by law.
(3) The state shall protect the health of citizens and shall promote the development
of sports and tourism.
(4) No one shall be subjected to forcible medical treatment or sanitary measures
except in circumstances established by law.
(5) The state shall exercise control over all medical facilities and over the
production and trade in pharmaceuticals, biologically active substances, and
medical equipment.
Article 53 [Education]
(1) Everyone shall have the right to education.
(2) School attendance up to the age of 16 is compulsory.
(3) Primary and secondary education in state and municipal schools is free.
In circumstances established by law, the higher educational establishments shall
provide education free of charge.
(4) Higher educational establishments shall enjoy academic autonomy.
(5) Citizens and organizations shall be free to found schools in accordance
with conditions and procedures established by law. The education they provide
shall fit the requirements of the state.
(6) The state shall promote education by opening and financing schools, by supporting
capable school and university students, and by providing opportunities for occupational
training and retraining. It shall exercise control over all kinds and levels
of schooling.
Article 54 [Culture, Creativity]
(1) Everyone shall have the right to avail himself of the national and universal
human cultural values and to develop his own culture in accordance with his
ethnic self-identification, which shall be recognized and guaranteed by the
law.
(2) Artistic, scientific, and technological creativity shall be recognized and
guaranteed by the law.
(3) The state shall protect all inventors' rights, copyrights, and related rights.
Article 55 [Environment]
Citizens shall have the right to a healthy and favorable environment corresponding
to the established standards and norms. They shall protect the environment.
Article 56 [Legal Counsel]
Everyone shall have the right to legal defence whenever his rights or legitimate
interests are violated or endangered. He shall have the right to be accompanied
by legal counsel when appearing before an agency of the state.
Article 57 [Infringement]
(1) The fundamental civil rights shall be irrevocable.
(2) Rights shall not be abused, nor shall they be exercised to the detriment
of the rights or the legitimate interests of others.
(3) Following a proclamation of war, martial law, or a state of emergency the
exercise of individual civil rights may be temporarily curtailed by law, except
for the rights established by Article 28, 29, 31 (1)-(3), 32 (1), and 37.
Article 58 [Observing Constitution]
(1) Citizens shall observe and implement the Constitution and the laws. They
shall respect the rights and the legitimate interests of others.
(2) Obligations established by the Constitution and the law shall not be defaulted
upon on grounds of religious or other convictions.
Article 59 [Military Service]
(1) To defend the country shall be a duty and a matter of honor of every Bulgarian
citizen. High treason and betrayal of the country shall be treated as crimes
of utmost gravity and shall be punished with all the severity of the law.
(2) The carrying out of military obligations, and the conditions and procedure
for exemption therefrom or for replacing them with alternative service, shall
be established by law.
Article 60 [Taxes]
(1) Citizens shall pay taxes and duties established by law proportionately
to their income and property.
(2) Any tax concession or surtax shall be established by law.
Article 61 [Catastrophes]
Citizens shall assist the state and society in the case of a natural or other
disaster, on conditions and in a manner established by law.
Chapter Three National Assembly
Article 62 [Legislative Authority]
The National Assembly is vested with the legislative authority and shall exercise
parliamentary control.
Article 63 [Members]
The National Assembly shall consist of 240 members.
Article 64 [Term]
(1) The National Assembly is elected for a term of four years.
(2) In case of war, armed hostilities, or another state of emergency occurring
during or after the expiry of the National Assembly's term, its mandate shall
be extended until the expiry
of the circumstances.
(3) Elections for a new National Assembly shall be held within two months from
the expiry of the mandate of the preceding one.
Article 65 [Eligibility]
(1) Eligible for election to the National Assembly is any Bulgarian citizen
who does not hold another citizenship, is above the age of 21, is not under
a judicial interdiction, and is not serving a prison sentence.
(2) A candidate for a National Assembly seat holding a state post shall resign
upon the registration of his candidacy.
Article 66 [Control]
The legitimacy of an election may be contested before the Constitutional Court
by a procedure established by law.
Article 67 [Mandate]
(1) Members of the National Assembly shall represent not only their constituencies
but the entire nation. No Member shall be held to a mandatory mandate.
(2) Members of the National Assembly shall act on the basis of the Constitution
and the laws and in accordance with their conscience and convictions.
Article 68 [Incompatibility, Sleeping Mandate]
(1) A Member of the National Assembly shall not occupy another state post,
nor shall engage in any other activity which the law defines as incompatible
with the status of a Member of the National Assembly.
(2) A Member of the National Assembly elected as a minister shall cease to serve
as a Member during his term of office as a minister. During that period, he
shall be substituted in the National Assembly in a manner established by law.
Article 69 [Indemnity]
Members of the National Assembly shall not be held criminally liable for their
opinions or votes in the National Assembly.
Article 70 [Immunity]
A Member of the National Assembly is immune from detention or criminal prosecution
except for the perpetration of a grave crime, when a warrant from the National
Assembly or, in between its session, from the Chairman of the National Assembly,
is required. No warrant shall be required when a Member is detained in the course
of committing a grave crime; the National Assembly or, in between its session,
the Chairman of the National Assembly, shall be notified forthwith.
Article 71 [Emoluments]
The National Assembly shall establish the emoluments of its Members.
Article 72 [Resignation, Dismissal]
(1) A Member's prerogatives shall expire before the expiry of his term of office
upon any of the following occurrences:
1) resignation presented before the National Assembly;
2) enforcement of a prison sentence for an intentional crime, or of an unsuspended
prison sentence;
3) establishment of ineligibility or incompatibility.
(2) Instances 1 and 2 shall require a resolution of the National Assembly; instance
3 shall require a ruling by the Constitutional Court.
Article 73 [Internal Rules]
The National Assembly is organized and shall act in accordance with the Constitution
and its own internal rules.
Article 74 [Sessions, Recesses]
The National Assembly is a permanently acting body. It is free to determine
its recesses.
Article 75 [First Session]
A newly elected National Assembly shall be convened for a first session by the
President of the Republic within a month following its election. Should the
President fail to do so, it shall be convened by one-fifth of the Members of
the National Assembly.
Article 76 [Oath]
(1) The first session of the National Assembly shall be opened by the senior
present Member.
(2) At the first session the Members shall swear the following oath:
"I swear in the name of the Republic of Bulgaria to observe the Constitution
and the laws of the country and in all my actions to be guided by the interests
of the people. I am sworn."
(3) The National Assembly shall elect at the same session its Chairman and Vice
Chairmen.
Article 77 [Functions of Chairmen]
(1) The Chairman of the National Assembly shall:
1) represent the National Assembly;
2) propose the agenda for each session;
3) open, chair and close the sessions of the National Assembly and maintain
orderly proceedings;
4) attest by his signature the contents of the acts passed by the National Assembly;
5) promulgate all resolutions, declarations, and addresses passed by the National
Assembly;
6) organize the National Assembly's international contacts.
(2) The Vice Chairmen of the National Assembly shall assist the Chairman and
carry out any activities devolved by him.
Article 78 [Convention]
The National Assembly shall be convened for its sessions by its Chairman:
1) on his own initiative;
2) at the request of one-fifth of its members;
3) at the request of the President;
4) at the request of the Council of Ministers.
Article 79 [Committees]
(1) The National Assembly shall elect permanent and ad hoc committees from
among its Members.
(2) The permanent committees shall aid the work of the National Assembly and
shall exercise parliamentary control on its behalf.
(3) Ad hoc committees shall be elected to conduct inquiries and investigations.
Article 80 [Testimony]
Any official or citizen summoned by a parliamentary commission is obliged to
testify and present any required documents.
Article 81 [Quorum, Majorities, Voting]
(1) The National Assembly is free to hold a session and pass resolutions when
more than half of its Members are present.
(2) The National Assembly shall pass laws and other acts by a majority of more
than one-half of the present Members, except
when a qualified majority is required by the Constitution.
(3) Voting is personal and open, except when the Constitution requires or the
National Assembly resolves on a secret ballot.
Article 82 [Publicity]
Sessions of the National Assembly shall be public. The National Assembly may
by exception resolve to hold some sessions behind closed doors.
Article 83 [Government Participation]
(1) Ministers shall be free to attend the sessions of the National Assembly
and the parliamentary committees. They shall be given priority in addressing
the Members.
(2) The National Assembly and the parliamentary committees shall be free to
order ministers to attend their sessions and respond to questions.
Article 84 [Functions]
The National Assembly shall:
1) pass, amend, and rescind the laws;
2) pass the state budget bill and the budget report;
3) establish the taxes and their size;
4) schedule the elections for a President of the Republic;
5) resolve on the holding of a national referendum;
6) elect and dismiss the Prime Minister and, on his motion, the members of the
Council of Ministers; effect changes in the government on a motion from the
Prime Minister;
7) create, transform and close down ministries on a motion from the Prime Minister;
8) elect and dismiss the Governor of the Bulgarian National Bank and the heads
of other institutions established by law;
9) approve state-loan agreements;
10) resolve on the declaration of war and conclusion of peace;
11) approve any deployment and use of Bulgarian armed forces outside the country's
borders, and the deployment of foreign troops on the territory of the country
or their crossing of that territory;
12) on a motion from the President or the Council of Ministers, introduce martial
law or a state of emergency on all or part of the country's territory;
13) grant amnesty;
14) institute orders and medals;
15) establish the official holidays.
Article 85 [International Instruments]
(1) The National Assembly shall ratify or denounce by law all international
instruments which:
1) are of a political or military nature;
2) concern the Republic of Bulgaria's participation in international organizations;
3) envisage corrections to the borders of the Republic of Bulgaria;
4) contain obligations for the treasury;
5) envisage the state's participation in international arbitration or legal
proceedings;
6) concern fundamental human rights;
7) affect the action of the law or require new legislation in order to be enforced;
8) expressly require ratification.
(2) Treaties ratified by the National Assembly may be amended or denounced only
by their built-in procedure or in accordance with the universally acknowledged
norms of international law.
(3) The conclusion of an international treaty requiring an
amendment to the Constitution shall be preceded by the passage of such an amendment.
Article 86 [Binding Laws and Resolutions]
(1) The National Assembly shall pass laws, resolutions, declarations, and addresses.
(2) The laws and resolutions passed by the National Assembly shall be binding
on all state bodies, all organizations, and all citizens.
Article 87 [Initiative]
(1) Any Member of the National Assembly or the Council of Ministers shall have
the right to introduce a bill.
(2) The State Budget Bill shall be drawn up and presented by the Council of
Ministers.
Article 88 [Deliberation]
(1) Bills shall be read and voted upon twice, during different sessions. By
way of exception, the National Assembly may resolve to hold both ballots during
a single session.
(2) All other acts of the National Assembly shall require a single ballot.
(3) Each passed act is promulgated in The National Gazette within 15 days from
its passage.
Article 89 [Motion of No Confidence]
(1) A motion of no confidence in the in the Council of Ministers shall require
a seconding by one-fifth or more of the Members of the National Assembly. To
be passed, the motion shall require a majority of more than half of the votes
of all National Assembly Members.
(2) Should the National Assembly vote no confidence in the Prime Minister or
the Council of Ministers, the Prime Minister shall hand in his government's
resignation.
(3) Should the National Assembly reject a vote of no confidence in the Council
of Ministers, the next motion for a vote of no confidence on the same grounds
shall not be made before the expiry of six months.
Article 90 [Interpellations]
(1) Members of the National Assembly shall have the right to address questions
and interpellations to the Council of Ministers and to individual ministers,
who shall be obligated to respond.
(2) A mation by one-fifth of the Members of the National Assembly shall be required
to turn an interpellation into a debate on which a resolution shall be passed.
Article 91 [Accountancy Chamber]
(1) The National Assembly shall establish an Accountancy Chamber to control
the implementation of the budget.
(2) The organization, authority, and procedures by which the Accountancy Chamber
shall act shall be established by law.
Chapter Four President of the Republic
Article 92 [Head of State]
(1) The President is the head of state. He shall embody the unity of the nation
and shall represent the state in its international relations.
(2) The President shall be assisted in his actions by a Vice President.
Article 93 [Elections]
(1) The President is elected directly by the voters for a period of five years
by a procedure established by law.
(2) Eligible for President is any natural-born Bulgarian citizen
over 40 years of age and qualified to be elected to the National Assembly, who
has resided in the country for the five years preceding the election.
(3) To be elected, a candidate shall require more than one-half of the valid
ballots, provided that more than half of all eligible voters have cast their
ballots in the election.
(4) Should none of the candidates for President be elected, a runoff vote is
held within seven days between the two top candidates. The winner is the candidate
who wins the majority of the vote.
(5) A presidential election shall be held not earlier than three months and
not later than two months before the expiry of the term of office of the incumbent
President.
(6) The Constitutional Court shall rule upon any challenge to the legality of
a presidential election within a month's time after the election.
Article 94 [Vice President]
The Vice President is elected at the same time and on the same ticket as the
President, on the same conditions and by the same procedure.
Article 95 [Re-election, Incompatibility]
(1) The President and the Vice President shall be eligible for only one re-election
to the same office.
(2) The President and the Vice President shall not serve as Members of the National
Assembly or engage in any other state, public or economic activity, nor shall
they participate in the leadership of any political party.
Article 96 [Oath]
The President and the Vice President shall swear before the National Assembly
the oath established by Article 76 (2).
Article 97 [Resignation, Dismissal]
(1) The President's or Vice President's authority shall expire before the expiry
of his term of office upon any of the following occurrences:
1) resignation submitted before the Constitutional Court;
2) lasting incapacitation caused by a grave illness;
3) following Article 103;
4) death.
(2) In instances 1 and 2, the prerogatives of the President or Vice President
shall be suspended upon the Constitutional Court's establishing the existence
of the respective circumstances.
(3) In instance 1, the Vice President shall assume the duties of the President
until the expiry of the term of office.
(4) Should the Vice President be incapable of assuming the President's duties,
the President's prerogatives shall be assumed by the Chairman of the National
Assembly until the election of a new President and Vice President. Elections
for President and Vice President shall then be held within two months.
Article 98 [Functions]
The President of the Republic shall:
1) schedule the elections for a National Assembly and for the bodies of local
self-government and shall set the date for national referendums pursuant to
a resolution of the National Assembly;
2) address the Nation and the National Assembly;
3) conclude international treaties in the circumstances established by the law;
4) promulgate the laws;
5) on a motion from the Council of Ministers, determine the borders of the administrative
territorial units and their centres;
6) on a motion from the Council of Ministers, appoint and dismiss the heads
of the Republic of Bulgaria's diplomatic and permanent missions at international
organizations, and receive the credentials and the letters of recall of the
foreign diplomatic representatives to this country;
7) appoint and dismiss from office other state officials, established by law;
8) award orders and medals;
9) grant, restore, relieve from and withdraw Bulgarian citizenship;
10) grant asylum;
11) exercise the right to pardon;
12) cancel uncollectible debts to the state;
13) name landmarks and communities of national importance;
14) inform the National Assembly on basic problems within his prerogatives.
Article 99 [Establishing Government]
(1) Following consultations with the parliamentary groups, the President shall
appoint the Prime Minister candidate nominated by the party holding the highest
number of seats in the National Assembly to form a government.
(2) Should the Prime Minister candidate fail to form a government within seven
days, the President shall entrust this task to a Prime Minister candidate nominated
by the second largest parliamentary group.
(3) Should the new Prime Minister candidate also fail to form a government within
the period established by the preceding paragraph, the President shall entrust
the task to a Prime Minister candidate nominated by one of the minor parliamentary
groups.
(4) Should the consultations prove successful, the President shall ask the National
Assembly to elect the Prime Minister candidate.
(5) Absent an agreement on the formation of a government, the President shall
appoint a caretaker government, dissolve the National Assembly and schedule
new elections within the period established by Article 64 (3). The President's
act on the dissolution of the National Assembly shall also establish the date
of the new general elections.
(6) The procedure for forming a government established by the preceding paragraphs
shall further apply in the instances envisaged by Article 111 (1).
(7) In the instances envisaged by Paragraphs (5) and (6), the President shall
not dissolve the National Assembly during the last three months of his term
of office. Should Parliament fail to form a government within the established
period, the President shall appoint a caretaker government.
Article 100 [Commander-in-Chief, War]
(1) The President is the Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of
the Republic of Bulgaria.
(2) The President shall appoint and dismiss the higher command of the Armed
Forces and shall bestow all higher military ranks on a motion from the Council
of Ministers.
(3) The President shall preside over the Consultative National Security Council,
the status of which is established by law.
(4) The President shall proclaim general or partial mobilization on a motion
from the Council of Ministers in accordance with the law.
(5) The President shall proclaim a state of war in the case of an armed attack
against Bulgaria or whenever urgent actions are required by virtue of an international
commitment, or shall proclaim martial law or any other state of emergency whenever
the National Assembly is not in session and cannot be convened. The National
Assembly shall then be convened forthwith to endorse the decision.
Article 101 [Veto]
(1) Within the term established by Article 88 (3), the President is free to
return a bill together with his motives to the National Assembly for further
debate, which shall not be denied.
(2) The new passage of such a bill shall require a majority of more than half
of all Members of the National Assembly.
(3) Following a new passage of the bill by the National Assembly, the President
shall promulgate it within seven days following its receipt.
Article 102 [Decrees, Addresses]
(1) Within the prerogatives vested in him, the President shall issue decrees,
addresses, and messages.
(2) The President's decrees shall be countersigned by the Prime Minister or
the minister concerned.
(3) No countersigning is required for decrees pertaining to:
1) the appointment of a caretaker government;
2) the appointment of a Prime Minister candidate;
3) dissolution of the National Assembly;
4) return of a bill to the National Assembly for further debate;
5) the organization and manner of action of the offices of the Presidency and
the appointment of their staff;
6) the scheduling of an election or referendum;
7) the promulgation of a law.
Article 103 [Immunity, Impeachment]
(1) The President and Vice President shall not be held liable for actions committed
in the performance of their duties, except for high treason, or a violation
of the Constitution.
(2) An impeachment shall require a motion from no fewer than one-fourth of all
Members of the National Assembly and shall stand if supported by more than two-thirds
of the Members.
(3) An impeachment against the President or Vice President shall be tried by
the Constitutional Court within a month following the lodging of the impeachment.
Should the Constitutional Court convict the President or Vice President of high
treason, or of a violation of the Constitution, the President's or Vice President's
prerogatives shall be suspended.
(4) No one shall place the President or the Vice President under detention,
nor shall initiate criminal proceedings against them.
Article 104 [Devolution of Duties]
The President is free to devolve to the Vice President the prerogatives established
by Article 98 Sub-Paragraphs 7, 9, 10 and 11.
Chapter Five Council of Ministers
Article 105 [Policy, Administration]
(1) The Council of Ministers shall head the implementation of the state's domestic
and foreign policy.
(2) The Council of Ministers shall ensure the public order and national security
and shall exercise overall guidance over the state administration and the Armed
Forces.
Article 106 [Functions]
The Council of Ministers shall:
- manage the implementation of the state budget;
- organize the management of the state's assets; and
- conclude, confirm, or denounce international treaties when authorized to do
so by law.
Article 107 [Ministerial Control]
The Council of Ministers shall rescind any illegitimate or improper act issued
by a minister.
Article 108 [Composition, Responsibility]
(1) The Council of Ministers shall consist of a Prime Minister, Deputy Prime
Ministers, and ministers.
(2) The Prime Minister shall head, coordinate, and bear responsibility for the
overall policy of the government. He shall appoint and dismiss the deputy ministers.
(3) Each member of the Council of Ministers shall head a ministry, except insofar
as the National Assembly resolves otherwise. Each minister shall account for
his own activity.
Article 109 [Oath]
The members of the Council of Ministers shall swear before the National Assembly
the oath established by Article 76 (2).
Article 110 [Eligibility]
Eligible for election to the Council of Ministers shall be any Bulgarian citizen
qualified to be elected to the National Assembly.
Article 111 [Expiration]
(1) The authority of the Council of Ministers shall expire upon any of the
following occurrences:
1) a vote of no confidence in the Council of Ministers or the Prime Minister;
2) the resignation of the Council of Ministers or the Prime Minister;
3) death of the Prime Minister.
(2) The Council of Ministers shall hand in its resignation before the newly
elected National Assembly.
(3) Should any of the above occur, the Council of Ministers shall continue to
act until the election of a new Council of Ministers.
Article 112 [Vote of Confidence]
(1) The Council of Ministers is free to ask for the National Assembly's vote
of confidence in its overall policy, its program declaration, or on a specific
issue. A resolution shall require a majority of more than half of the votes
of the National Assembly Members present.
(2) Should the Council of Ministers fail to receive the requested vote of confidence,
the Prime Minister shall hand in the government's resignation.
Article 113 [Incompatibility]
(1) A member of the Council of Ministers shall not hold a post or engage in
any activity incompatible with the status of a Member of the National Assembly.
(2) The National Assembly is free to determine any other post or activity which
a member of the Council of Ministers shall not hold or engage in.
Article 114 [Decrees, Ordinances]
Pursuant to and in implementation of the laws, the Council of Ministers shall
adopt decrees, ordinances, and resolutions. The Council of Ministers shall promulgate
rules and regulations by decree.
Article 115 [Ministerial Regulations, Orders]
A minister shall issue rules, regulations, instructions, and
orders.
Article 116 [Indepndence, Political Neutrality]
(1) State employees shall be the executors of the nation's will and interests.
In the performance of their duty they shall be guided solely by the law and
shall be politically neutral.
(2) A law shall establish the conditions for the appointment and dismissal of
state employees and the conditions on which they shall be free to belong to
political parties and trade unions, as well as to exercise their right to strike.
Chapter Six Judicial Power
Article 117 [Purpose, Independence]
(1) The judicial branch of government shall safeguard the rights and legitimate
interests of all citizens, legal entities, and the state.
(2) The judicial branch is independent. In the performance of their functions,
all judges, court assessors, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates shall
be subservient only to the law.
(3) The judicial branch of government shall have an independent budget.
Article 118 [In the Name of The People]
All judicial power is exercised in the name of the people.
Article 119 [Court Hierarchy]
(1) Justice is administered by the Supreme Court of Cassation, the Supreme
Administrative Court, courts of appeals, courts of assizes, courts-martial and
district courts.
(2) Specialized courts may be set up by virtue of a law.
(3) There shall be no extraordinary courts.
Article 120 [Access to Courts]
(1) The courts shall supervise the legality of the acts and actions of the
administrative bodies.
(2) Citizens and legal entities shall be free to contest any administrative
act which affects them, except those listed expressly by the laws.
Article 121 [Equality Before Courts, Publicity]
(1) The courts shall ensure the equality and mutual challengeability of the
parties to a judicial trial.
(2) Judicial proceedings shall ensure the establishment of truth.
(3) All courts shall conduct their hearings in public, unless provided otherwise
by law.
(4) All court rulings shall be motivated.
Article 122 [Right to Counsel]
(1) Citizens and legal entities shall have the right to legal counsel at all
stages of a trial.
(2) The procedure by which the right to legal counsel is practiced shall be
established by law.
Article 123 [Court Assessors]
Court assessors shall participate in the trial process in certain cases established
by law.
Article 124 [Supreme Court of Cassation]
The Supreme Court of Cassation shall exercise supreme judicial oversight as
to the precise and equal application of the law by all courts.
Article 125 [Supreme Administrative Court]
(1) The Supreme Administrative Court shall exercise supreme judicial oversight
as to the precise and equal application of the
law in administrative justice.
(2) The Supreme Administrative Court shall rule on all challenges to the legality
of acts of the Council of Ministers and the individual ministers, and of other
acts established by law.
Article 126 [Prosecutor's Office]
(1) The structure of the prosecutors' office shall correspond to that of the
courts.
(2) The Chief Prosecutor shall oversee the legality and provide methodological
guidance to all other prosecutors.
Article 127 [Prosecutor's Functions]
The Prosecutor's Office shall ensure that legality is observed:
1) by bringing charges against criminal suspects and supporting the charges
in common criminal trials;
2) by overseeing the enforcement of penalties and other measures of compulsion;
3) by acting for the rescindment of all illegitimate acts;
4) by taking part in civil and administrative suits whenever required to do
so by law.
Article 128 [Investigation]
The investigating bodies shall be within the system of the judicial branch.
They shall perform the preliminary investigation in criminal cases.
Article 129 [Appointment, Dismissal of Justices]
(1) Justices, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates are elected, promoted,
demoted, reassigned, and dismissed by the Supreme Judicial Council.
(2) The Chairman of the Supreme Court of Cassation, the Chairman of the Supreme
Administrative Court, and the Chief Prosecutor shall be appointed and dismissed
by the President of the Republic on a motion from the Supreme Judicial Council
for a period of seven years, and shall not be eligible for a second term in
office. The President shall not deny an appointment or dismissal on a repeated
motion.
(3) Justices, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates shall become unsubstitutable
upon completing a third year in the respective office. They shall be dismissed
only upon retirement, resignation, upon the enforcement of a prison sentence
for a deliberate crime, or upon lasting actual disability to perform their functions
over more than one year.
Article 130 [Supreme Judicial Council]
(1) The Supreme Judicial Council shall consist of 25 members. Sitting on it
ex officio shall be the Chairman of the Supreme Court of Cassation, the Chairman
of the Supreme Administrative Court, and the Chief Prosecutor.
(2) Eligible for election to the Supreme Judicial Council besides its ex officio
members shall be practicing lawyers of high professional and moral integrity
with at least 15 years of professional experience.
(3) Eleven of the members of the Supreme Judicial Council shall be elected by
the National Assembly, and eleven shall be elected by the bodies of the judicial
branch.
(4) The elected members of the Supreme Judicial Council shall serve terms of
five years. They shall not be eligible for immediate re-election.
(5) The meetings of the Supreme Judicial Council shall be chaired by the Minister
of Justice, who shall not be entitled to a vote.
Article 131 [Secret Ballot]
Any resolution of the Supreme Judicial Council to appoint, promote, demote,
reassign, or dismiss a justice, a prosecutor or an investigating magistrate,
or a resolution pursuant to Article 129 (2), shall be passed by a secret ballot.
Article 132 [Immunity]
(1) Justices, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates shall enjoy the same
immunity as the Members of the National Assembly.
(2) The immunity of a justice, prosecutor, or investigating magistrate shall
be lifted by the Supreme Judicial Council only in the circumstances established
by the law.
Article 133 [Legal Procedures]
The organization and the activity of the Supreme Judicial Council, of the courts,
the prosecution and the investigation, the status of the justices, prosecutors
and investigating magistrates, the conditions and the procedure for the appointment
and dismissal of justices, court assessors, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates,
and the materialization of their liability shall be established by law.
Article 134 [The Bar]
(1) The bar is free, independent, and autonomous. It shall assist citizens
and legal entities in the defence of their rights and legitimate interests.
(2) The organization and manner of activity of the bar shall be established
by law.
Chapter Seven Local Self-Government and Local Administration
Article 135 [Territorial Division]
(1) The territory of the Republic of Bulgaria is divided into municipalities
and regions. The territorial division and the prerogatives of the Capital and
the other major cities shall be established by law.
(2) Other administrative territorial units and bodies of self-government shall
be establishable by law.
Article 136 [Election, Referendum]
(1) A municipality is the basic administrative territorial unit at the level
of which self-government shall be practiced. Citizens shall participate in the
government of the municipality both through their elected bodies of local self-government
and directly, through a referendum or a general meeting of the populace.
(2) The borders of a municipality shall be established following a referendum
of the populace.
(3) A municipality shall be a legal entity.
Article 137 [Association of Municipalities]
(1) Municipalities shall be free to associate in the solution of common matters.
(2) The law shall establish conditions conducive to association among municipalities.
Article 138 [Municipal Council]
The body of local self-government within a municipality shall be a municipal
council elected directly by the populace for a term of four years by a procedure
established by law.
Article 139 [Mayor]
(1) The mayor is the body of executive power within a municipality. He is elected
by the municipal council for a term of four years by a procedure established
by law.
(2) In his activity a mayor shall be guided by the law, the acts of the municipal
council, and the sense of the populace.
Article 140 [Municipal Property]
A municipality is entitled to own municipal property, which it shall use to
the interest of the territorial community.
Article 141 [Municipal Budget]
(1) A municipality shall have its own budget.
(2) A municipality's permanent sources of revenue shall be established by law.
(3) The state shall ensure the normal work of the municipalities through budget
appropriations and other means.
Article 142 [Region]
A region is an administrative territorial unit entrusted with the conduct of
a regional policy, the implementation of state government on a local level,
and the ensuring of harmony of national and local interests.
Article 143 [Regional Governor]
(1) Each region is governed by a regional governor aided by a regional administration.
(2) A regional governor is appointed by the Council of Ministers.
(3) The regional governor shall ensure the implementation of the state's policy,
the safeguarding of the national interests, law and public order, and shall
exercise administrative control.
Article 144 [Control]
The central bodies of state and their local representatives shall exercise control
over the legality of the acts of the bodies of local government only when authorized
to do so by law.
Article 145 [Defence of Autonomy]
A municipal council is free to challenge before a court any act which encroaches
on its rights.
Article 146 [Legal Procedures]
The organization and the procedures of the bodies of local self-government and
local administration shall be established by law.
Chapter Eight Constitutional Court
Article 147 [Composition, Term, Incompatibility, Immunity]
(1) The Constitutional Court shall consist of 12 justices, one-third of whom
shall be elected by the National Assembly, one-third shall be appointed by the
President, and one-third shall be elected by a joint meeting of the justices
of the Supreme Court of Cassation and the Supreme Administrative Court.
(2) The justices of the Constitutional Court shall be elected or appointed for
a period of nine years and shall not be eligible for re-election or re-appointment.
The make-up of the Constitutional Court shall be renewed every three years from
each quota, in a rotation order established by law.
(3) The justices of the Constitutional Court shall be lawyers of high professional
and moral integrity and with at least fifteen years of professional experience.
(4) The justices of the Constitutional Court shall elect by secret ballot a
Chairman of the Court for a period of three years.
(5) The status of a justice of the Constitutional Court shall be incompatible
with a representative mandate, or any state or public post, or membership in
a political party or trade union, or with the practicing of a free, commercial,
or any other paid occupation.
(6) A justice of the Constitutional Court shall enjoy the same immunity as a
Member of the National Assembly.
Article 148 [Resignation, Expiration]
(1) The mandate of a justice of the Constitutional Court shall expire upon
any of the following occurrences:
1) the expiry of the term of office;
2) resignation submitted before the Constitutional Court;
3) the enforcement of a prison sentence for a deliberate crime;
4) actual incapacitation which has lasted for more than one year;
5) incompatibility with an office or activity pursuant to Article 147 (5);
6) death.
(2) The Constitutional Court shall lift a justice's immunity or establish his
actual incapacity to perform his duties by a secret ballot requiring a majority
of at least two-thirds of the votes of all justices.
(3) Should the mandate of a Constitutional Court justice be terminated, a new
justice from the same quota shall be appointed or elected within one month.
Article 149 [Functions]
(1) The Constitutional Court shall:
1) provide binding interpretations of the Constitution;
2) rule on challenges to the constitutionality of the laws and other acts passed
by the National Assembly and the acts of the President;
3) rule on competence suits between the National Assembly the President and
the Council of Ministers, and between the bodies of local self-government and
the central executive branch of government;
4) rule on the compatibility between the Constitution and the international
instruments concluded by the Republic of Bulgaria prior to their ratification,
and on the compatibility of domestic laws with the universally recognized norms
of international law and the international instruments to which Bulgaria is
a party;
5) rule on challenges to the constitutionality of political parties and associations;
6) rule on challenges to the legality of the election of the President and Vice
President;
7) rule on challenges to the legality of an election of a Member of the National
Assembly;
8) rule on impeachments by the National Assembly against the President or the
Vice President.
(2) No authority of the Constitutional Court shall be vested or suspended by
law.
Article 150 [Initiatives]
(1) The Constitutional Court shall act on an initiative from not fewer than
one-fifth of all Members of the National Assembly, the President, the Council
of Ministers, the Supreme Court of Cassation, the Supreme Administrative Court,
or the Chief Prosecutor. A challenge to competence pursuant to Paragraph (1.3)
of the preceding Article may further be filed by a municipal council.
(2) Should it find a discrepancy between a law and the Constitution, the Supreme
Court of Cassation or the Supreme Administrative Court shall suspend the proceedings
on a case and shall refer the matter to the Constitutional Court.
Article 151 [Effect of Rulings]
(1) A ruling of the Constitutional Court shall require a majority of more than
half of the votes of all justices.
(2) Rulings of the Constitutional Court shall be promulgated in The National
Gazette within 15 days from the date on which they are issued. A ruling shall
come into force three days after
its promulgation. Any act found to be unconstitutional shall cease to apply
as of the date on which the ruling shall come into force.
(3) Any portion of a law which is not ruled unconstitutional shall remain in
force.
Article 152 [Legal Procedures]
The organization and the manner of proceeding of the Constitutional Court shall
be established by law.
Chapter Nine Amendments to the Constitution, Adoption of a new Constitution
Article 153 [Amendment by National Assembly]
The National Assembly is free to amend all provisions of the Constitution except
those within the prerogatives of the Grand National Assembly.
Article 154 [Amendment Bill]
(1) The initiative to introduce a constitutional amendment bill shall belong
to one-fourth of the Members of the National Assembly and to the President.
(2) An amendment bill shall be debated by the National Assembly not earlier
than one month and not later than three months from the date on which it is
introduced.
Article 155 [Majorities]
(1) A constitutional amendment shall require a majority of three-fourths of
the votes of all Members of the National Assembly in three ballots on three
different days.
(2) A bill which has received less than three-fourths but more than two-thirds
of the votes of all Members shall be eligible for reintroduction after not fewer
than two months and not more than five months. To be passed at this new reading,
the bill shall require a majority of two-thirds of the votes of all Members.
Article 156 [Promulgation]
An amendment to the Constitution is signed and promulgated in The National Gazette
by the Chairman of the Grand National Assembly within seven days following its
passage.
Article 157 [Grand National Assembly]
A Grand National Assembly shall consist of 400 Members elected by the generally
established procedure.
Article 158 [Functions]
A Grand National Assembly shall:
1) adopt a new Constitution;
2) resolve on any changes in the territory of the Republic of Bulgaria and ratify
any international instrument envisaging such a change;
3) resolve on any changes in the form of state structure or form of government;
4) resolve on any amendment to Article 5 (2) and (4) and Article 57 (1) and
(3);
5) resolve on any amendment to Chapter Nine.
Article 159 [Initiative]
(1) The initiative to introduce an amendment bill pursuant to the preceding
Article shall belong to one-third of the Members of the National Assembly and
to the President.
(2) The draft of a new constitution or a proposed amendment to the existing
Constitution, and any bill to introduce a change in the territory of the country
pursuant to Article 158 shall be debated by the National Assembly not earlier
than two months and not later than five months from the date on which it is
introduced.
Article 160 [Grand National Assembly Elections]
(1) A resolution by the National Assembly announcing elections for a Grand
National Assembly shall require a majority of two-thirds of the votes of all
Members.
(2) The President shall schedule the elections for a Grand National Assembly
within three months from the passage of the National Assembly's resolution.
(3) The mandate of the National Assembly shall expire with the holding of the
elections for a Grand National Assembly.
Article 161 [Majority]
To pass a bill, the Grand National Assembly shall require a majority of two-thirds
of the votes of all Members, in three ballots on three different days.
Article 162 [Functions]
(1) A Grand National Assembly shall resolve only on the constitutional amendment
bills for which it has been elected.
(2) In an emergency, a Grand National Assembly shall further perform the functions
of a National Assembly.
(3) The prerogatives of a Grand National Assembly shall expire after it resolves
on all matters for which it has been elected. The President shall then schedule
elections by a procedure established by law.
Article 163 [Promulgation]
An act of the Grand National Assembly is signed and promulgated in The National
Gazette by the Assembly's Chairman within seven days following its passage.
Chapter Ten Coat of Arms, Seal, Flag, Anthem, Capital
Article 164 [Coat of Arms]
The Coat of Arms of the Republic of Bulgaria shall depict a gold lion rampant
on a dark gules shield.
Article 165 [State Seal]
The State Seal shall depict the Coat of Arms of the Republic of Bulgaria.
Article 166 [National Fla
]
The Flag of the Republic of Bulgaria is a tricolor: white, green, and red from
top, placed horizontally.
Article 167 [Usage Regulation]
The rules for the placing of the State Seal and the display of the National
Flag is established by law.
Article 168 [Anthem]
The Anthem of the Republic of Bulgaria is the song "Mila Rodino".
Article 169 [Capital Sofia]
The Republic of Bulgaria shall have for its Capital the City of Sofia.
[Chapter Eleven] Transitional and Concluding Provisions
Section 1 [Grand National Assembly]
(1) The Grand National Assembly shall dissolve itself after the adoption of
the Constitution.
(2) The Grand National Assembly shall continue to function as a National Assembly
until the election of a new National Assembly. Within this term, it shall pass
bills for the election
of a new National Assembly, a President, bodies of local self-government, and
other bills. The Constitutional Court and the Supreme Judicial Council shall
be established within the same term.
(3) The Members of the National Assembly, the President, the Vice President,
and the members of the Council of Ministers shall swear the oath established
by this Constitution at the first session of the National Assembly following
the coming into force of this Constitution.
Section 2 [Court Functions]
Pending the election of a Supreme Court of Cassation and a Supreme Administrative
Court, their prerogatives pursuant to Article 130 (3) and Article 147 (1) shall
be exercised by the Supreme Court of the Republic of Bulgaria.
Section 3 [Old Law]
(1) The provisions of the existing laws shall be applicable insofar as they
do not contravene the Constitution.
(2) Within a year from this Constitution's coming into force, the National Assembly
shall rescind those provisions of the existing laws which have not been rescinded
by virtue of the direct force of the Constitution pursuant to its Article 5
(2).
(3) The laws required expressly by this Constitution shall be passed by the
National Assembly within three years.
Section 4 [Judicial Branch]
The organization of the judicial branch of government established by the Constitution
shall come into force following the passage of the new structural and procedural
laws within the term established by Section 3 (2).
Section 5 [Old Justices]
Justices, prosecutors, and investigating magistrates shall become un-substitutable
if within three months of its formation the Supreme Judicial Council does not
rule that they lack the necessary professional merits.
Section 6 [Media]
Pending the passage of new legislation concerning the Bulgarian National Television,
the Bulgarian National Radio and the Bulgarian News Agency, the National Assembly
shall practice the prerogatives vested in the Grand National Assembly with respect
to these national institutions.
Section 7 [National Assembly Elections]
(1) Elections for a National Assembly and bodies of local self-government shall
be held within three months from the self-dissolution of the Grand National
Assembly. The date of the elections shall be scheduled by the President in accordance
with his prerogatives pursuant to Article 98 Sub-Paragraph 1.
(2) The elections for a President and a Vice President shall be held within
three months from the elections for a National Assembly.
(3) Pending the election of a President and a Vice President, their functions
established by this Constitution shall be performed by the Chairman (President)
and the Vice Chairman (Vice President).
Section 8 [Old Government]
The government shall continue to perform its functions pursuant to this Constitution
until the formation of a new government.
Section 9 [Old Constitution]
This Constitution shall come into force on the day on which it
is promulgated in The National Gazette by the Chairman of the Grand National
Assembly, and shall supersede the Constitution of the Republic of Bulgaria adopted
on 18 May 1971.