Constitutional Court of Italy

The Constitutional Court of the Italian Republic (Italian: Corte costituzionale della Repubblica Italiana) is the highest court of Italy in matters of constitutional law. Sometimes, the name Consulta is used as a metonym for it, because its sessions are held in Palazzo della Consulta in Rome.

Constitutional Court


Established1948 (in the Constitution)
1955 (effective)
LocationRome, Italy
Composition methodElected/appointed in equal portions by Italian Parliament, President of the Italian Republic, and highest Italian courts
Authorized byConstitution of Italy
Judge term length9 years (not renewable)
Number of positions15
WebsiteOfficial website
President of the Court
CurrentlyMarta Cartabia
Since11 December 2019
Italian Republic
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Italy
Constitution
Foreign relations

History

The court is a post-World War II innovation.

The Court was established by the republican Constitution of Italy in 1948, but it became operative only in 1955 after the enactment of the Constitutional Law n. 1 of 1953 and the Law n. 87 of 1953.[1] It held its first hearing in 1956.

Powers

According to Article 134[2] of the Constitution, the Court shall pass judgement on

  • controversies on the constitutional legitimacy of laws issued by the State and Regions and when the Court declares a law unconstitutional, the law ceases to have effect the day after the publication of the ruling;
  • conflicts arising from allocation of powers of the State and those powers allocated to State and Regions, and between Regions;
  • charges brought against the President.

The constitutional court passes on the constitutionality of laws with no right of appeal.

Since 12 October 2007, when reform of the Italian intelligence agencies approved in August 2007 came into force, the pretext of state secret cannot be used to deny access to documents by the Court.

Composition

The Constitutional Court is composed of 15 judges for the term of service of nine years: 5 appointed by the President, 5 elected by the Parliament of Italy[3] and 5 elected by the ordinary and administrative supreme courts. Candidates need to be either lawyers with twenty years or more experience, full professors of law, or (former) judges of the Supreme Administrative, Civil and Criminal tribunals.[4] The members then elect the President of the Court, since 11 December 2019 this has been Marta Cartabia. The President is elected from among its members in a secret ballot, by an absolute majority (8 votes in the case of a full court). If no person gets a majority, a runoff election between the two judges with the most votes occurs. The President of the Court appoints one or more vice-presidents to stand in for him in the event of his absence for any reason.

Membership

Appointed by

  President of Italy   Courts of Italy   Parliament of Italy

PortraitNameAppointed byDate electedDate sworn inEnd of termType of membership
Marta Cartabia
(1963– )
President
(Giorgio Napolitano)
2 September 201113 September 201113 September 2020President
(since 11 December 2019)
Aldo Carosi
(1951– )
Courts
(Court of Audit)
17 July 201113 September 201113 September 2020Vice President
(since 24 February 2016)
Mario Rosario Morelli
(1941– )
Courts
(Court of Cassation)
18 November 201112 December 201112 December 2020Vice President
(since 8 March 2018)
Giancarlo Coraggio
(1940– )
Courts
(Council of State)
19 November 201228 January 201328 January 2022Judge
Giuliano Amato
(1938– )
President
(Giorgio Napolitano)
12 September 201318 September 201318 September 2022Judge
Daria de Pretis
(1956– )
President
(Giorgio Napolitano)
18 October 201411 November 201411 November 2023Judge
Nicolò Zanon
(1961– )
President
(Giorgio Napolitano)
18 October 201411 November 201411 November 2023Judge
Silvana Sciarra
(1948– )
Parliament
(17th Legislature)
6 November 201411 November 201411 November 2023Judge
Franco Modugno
(1938– )
Parliament
(17th Legislature)
16 December 201521 December 201521 December 2024Judge
Augusto Barbera
(1938– )
Parliament
(17th Legislature)
16 December 201521 December 201521 December 2024Judge
Giulio Prosperetti
(1946– )
Parliament
(17th Legislature)
16 December 201521 December 201521 December 2024Judge
Giovanni Amoroso
(1949– )
Courts
(Court of Cassation)
26 October 201713 November 201713 November 2026Judge
Francesco Viganò
(1966– )
President
(Sergio Mattarella)
24 February 20188 March 20188 March 2027Judge
Luca Antonini
(1963– )
Parliament
(18th Legislature)
19 July 201826 July 201826 July 2027Judge
Stefano Petitti
(1953–)
Courts
(Court of Cassation)
28 November 201910 December 201910 December 2028Judge
Appointed not yet in office
Angelo Buscema
(1952– )
Courts
(Court of Audit)
12 July 2020Assuming office on 13 September 2020
Replacing Judge Aldo Carosi
Judge
gollark: Anyway, GTech™ runs several petawatts of nuclear reactor capacity tens of kilometres deep in the crust, and nobody has complained yet!
gollark: I cannot actually remember much of it.
gollark: As a young child, I read the entire Wikipedia article or something, on a laptop I had borrowed somehow.
gollark: And the design is now not used anywhere because it was bad.
gollark: Chernobyl was because they decided to do ridiculous secret experiments on running reactors, wrong, repeatedly.

See also

References

  1. url=http://www.governo.it/Presidenza/CONTENZIOSO/contenzioso_costituzionale/documentazione/L_19530311_87.pdf
  2. "The Italian Constitution". The official website of the Presidency of the Italian Republic.
  3. Parliament appoints judges with increasing delay: see (in Italian)Giuseppe Salvaggiulo, Consulta, sfregio infinito. Ventisei votazioni fallite, in La Stampa, 3 October 2015 and (in Italian)Giampiero Buonomo, Negoziazione politica e Parlamento...Non solo risate, in Avanti online, 26 August 2015.
  4. Justin O. Frosini and Sara Pennicino (2 February 2007). "Report from Italy". thecourt.ca. Archived from the original on 30 January 2015. Retrieved 29 January 2015.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.