Editing Constitution

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<br>(32) To register ships and aircraft as _____ in accordance with the law;
<br>(32) To register ships and aircraft as _____ in accordance with the law;
<br>(33) To approve the general guidelines for the national economic and social development plan to be submitted by the executive power during the third quarter of the first year of each constitutional term;
<br>(33) To approve the general guidelines for the national economic and social development plan to be submitted by the executive power during the third quarter of the first year of each constitutional term;
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<br>(34) To provide everything relevant to human development, economic progress with social justice, the growth of the national economy, the creation of jobs, the general public health, and the defense of the currency value;
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<br>(34) To provide everything relevant to human development, economic progress with social justice, the growth of the national economy, the creation of jobs, and the defense of the currency value;
<br>(35) To enact the organic law governing the Tribunal of Accounts;
<br>(35) To enact the organic law governing the Tribunal of Accounts;
<br>(36) To grant general amnesties for political offenses and common offenses related thereto. In no case may pardons include civil liabilities toward private individuals;
<br>(36) To grant general amnesties for political offenses and common offenses related thereto. In no case may pardons include civil liabilities toward private individuals;
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<br>(6) To elect, by a two-thirds vote, the magistrates of the courts of justice, with their respective alternates, in accordance with Article _____, as well as the president of the Tribunal of Accounts;
<br>(6) To elect, by a two-thirds vote, the magistrates of the courts of justice, with their respective alternates, in accordance with Article _____, as well as the president of the Tribunal of Accounts;
<br>(7) To receive the constitutional oath from the officers it elects or to delegate this power;
<br>(7) To receive the constitutional oath from the officers it elects or to delegate this power;
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<br>(8) To take cognizance of the report presented by the executive branch on measures taken during the suspension of constitutional guarantees;
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<br>(8) To delegate to the executive branch, by a two-thirds vote, the power to legislate, by means of legislative decrees, on a specific matter and for a particular period as established in the enabling law. These legislative decrees are subject to the same provisions as those which apply for the law;
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<br>(9) To grant honorary citizenship to foreigners who have rendered eminent services to the Republic;
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<br>(9) To take cognizance of the report presented by the executive branch on measures taken during the suspension of constitutional guarantees;
<br>(10) To grant to illustrious _____ who have rendered eminent services to the Republic, the honors of the National Pantheon, when twenty-five years have elapsed since their death;
<br>(10) To grant to illustrious _____ who have rendered eminent services to the Republic, the honors of the National Pantheon, when twenty-five years have elapsed since their death;
<br>(11) To establish, by a three-fourths vote, the national coat of arms, the flag of the Republic, and the national anthem;
<br>(11) To establish, by a three-fourths vote, the national coat of arms, the flag of the Republic, and the national anthem;
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Laws which are enacted on matters governed by organic laws are subject to the rules contained in the latter.
Laws which are enacted on matters governed by organic laws are subject to the rules contained in the latter.
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<u>Article.</u> The introduction of bills pertains to the President of the Republic and to the deputies and senators of Congress.
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<u>Article.</u> Bills may be introduced in either chamber, except those which by a special provision of this Constitution must necessarily be introduced either in the Chamber of Deputies or the Senate.
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The bills submitted by the President of the Republic shall be referred at once to committee. Those which are introduced by deputies or senators shall be subject to the procedure prescribed in the regulations on debate.
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<u>Article.</u> The introduction of bills pertains to:
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(1) The President of the Republic;
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<br>(2) The Delegated Committee of Congress or the Permanent Committee of either chamber;
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<br>(3) Deputies and senators numbering not less than three.
<u>Article.</u> All bills shall be presented with a statement of reasons for them.
<u>Article.</u> All bills shall be presented with a statement of reasons for them.
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<u>Article.</u> Every bill or proposed decree, the resolution of which does not pertain exclusively to one of the chambers, shall be discussed successively in both, the regulations on debate being observed as to form, intervals of time, and mode of procedure in discussions and voting.
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<u>Article.</u> Once a bill is approved by the chamber that originated it or that dealt with it first, it shall go to the other chamber for consideration. If that chamber in turn approves the bill, it becomes sanctioned, and the executive power shall promulgate it as a law, if it also approves of the bill. Any bill not objected to and not returned to the chamber of origin within ten working days shall be considered approved by the executive power, in which case the bill shall automatically be promulgated, and the order shall be given for its publication.
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<u>Article.</u> A bill approved in the chamber of its origin shall be referred to the other for discussion. If the latter approves it, it shall be sent to the President of the Republic who, if he has no objections to make, shall immediately publish it.
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<u>Article.</u> The bills submitted to the Congress by the executive power shall be discussed and acted upon in the session of the same year, unless they have been returned for lack of time to consider them. Otherwise, it shall be considered that they were sanctioned, and the executive power shall promulgate them as laws.  
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<u>Article.</u> Every bill shall be regarded as approved by the executive branch if it is not returned to the chamber of its origin within ten business days; unless, during this time, the Congress shall have adjourned or suspended its sessions, in which case the return must be made on the first business day on which the Congress next meets.
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<u>Article.</u> If bill is objected to in part by the executive power, it shall be returned to the chamber of origin for it to study the objections and state its judgments thereon. When this action has been taken, the bill shall go to the other chamber for the same purpose. If both chambers uphold the original sanction by an absolute majority vote, the executive power shall promulgate it; but if the chambers disagree on the objections, the bill shall not be reconsidered in the session of that year.
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<u>Article.</u> A bill rejected in whole or in part by the President of the Republic shall be returned, with his objections, to the chamber of origin. It must be discussed anew by the latter, and if it is confirmed by a vote of two thirds of the total membership it shall again be sent to the revisory chamber. If it is sanctioned by the latter by the same majority, the bill shall become a law and shall be returned to the President of the Republic for promulgation.
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<u>Article.</u> A bill that shall have been completely rejected by the executive power may be considered again at the session of that year only by an affirmative vote of a two-thirds absolute majority of both chambers. In that case the bill shall be reconsidered, and if an absolute majority has been obtained in the two chambers, the executive power shall promulgate it.
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The voting on a law shall be by roll call.
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<u>Article.</u> No bill that shall have been completely rejected by the chamber of origin may be presented a second time for consideration at the same session, except the General Budget of Revenues and Expenditures of the Republic.
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<u>Article.</u> If any bill is rejected in its entirety by the chamber of revision, it shall be returned to that of its origin with the objections made by the former. If upon examining it anew, it is approved by an absolute majority of the members present, it shall be returned to the chamber that rejected it, which shall again consider it and if it approves it by the same majority, it shall be sent to the President of the Republic for the purposes of Article _____; but if disapproved, it cannot be again introduced in the same period of sessions.
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<u>Article.</u> When a bill approved by one of the chambers has been totally rejected by the other, it shall go back to the former for reconsideration. If the chamber of origin ratifies it by an absolute majority, it shall again go to the chamber that reviews it, which can reject it again only by a two-thirds absolute majority. If such a majority has not been obtained, the bill shall be considered sanctioned.
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<u>Article.</u> If a bill is rejected in part, or amended or added to by the revisory chamber, the new discussion in the chamber of origin shall be confined to the part rejected or to the amendments or additions, without alteration in any way of the articles approved. If the additions or amendments made by the revisory chamber are approved by an absolute majority of votes present in the chamber of origin, the entire bill is sent to the President of the Republic for the purposes indicated in Article _____. If the additions or amendments made by the revisory chamber are disapproved by a majority of the votes in the chamber of origin, they shall be returned to the former for consideration of the reasons of the latter, and if the amendments or additions are rejected in this second revision by an absolute majority of votes present, the bill, insofar as it has been approved by both chambers, shall be sent to the Executive for the purposes indicated in Article _____. If the revisory chamber insists, by an absolute majority of votes present, upon such amendments or additions, the entire bill shall not be again presented until the following period of sessions unless both chambers agree, by an absolute majority of their members present, that the law be issued only with the approved articles, and those added or amended shall be reserved for examination and vote at the following sessions.
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<u>Article.</u> If a bill shall have been objected to only in part or modified by the chamber that considered it in the second place, it shall be returned to the other chamber for judgment on the questioned points. If it approves them, the bill is sanctioned; but if it rejects them by an absolute majority, the bill shall return to the other chamber, whose favorable vote by a two-thirds absolute majority shall be definitive for sanction of the bill.
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<u>Article.</u> In the interpretation, amendment, or repeal of laws, the same procedure shall be followed as that established for their enactment.
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<u>Article.</u> If the chamber that reviews a bill approved by the chamber of origin does not act upon it within three months that chamber shall be considered to have given it a favorable vote and the bill shall go to the executive power to be promulgated.
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<u>Article.</u> Every bill which is rejected in the chamber of its origin, cannot be again introduced in the sessions of that year.
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<u>Article.</u> Regardless of their stage of passage, the executive power may withdraw any bills that it has sent from Congress and table them or postpone their presentation until another legislative session.
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<u>Article.</u> Bills may be introduced in either chamber, except those which by a special provision of this Constitution must necessarily be introduced either in the Chamber of Deputies or the Senate.
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<u>Article.</u> A law is not binding unless it is promulgated and published. The publication of laws shall be regulated.
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<u>Article.</u> Bills shall preferentially be discussed in the chamber in which they are introduced, unless one month elapses since they were sent to the reporting committee without a report being made, in which case the bill may be discussed in the other chamber.
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<u>Article.</u> Regardless of their stage of passage, the President of the Republic may withdraw any bills that he has sent from Congress and table them or postpone their presentation until another legislative session.
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<u>Article.</u> The President of the Republic cannot offer objections to the resolutions of the Congress or of either chamber, when they exercise functions of an electoral body or of a jury, nor when the Chamber of Deputies declares that a high functionary of the Republic should be impeached for official crimes.
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Neither may he do so in regard to a decree of convocation to extraordinary sessions issued by the Delegated Committee.
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<u>Article.</u> The phrase to be used in the sanction of laws shall be the following: "The national Congress of the Republic of _____ sanctions with the force of Law." For the promulgation of laws, the tenor of the formula shall be: "Be it enacted as a law of the Republic, published, and entered in the Official Register" (Registro Oficial).
<u>Article.</u> The phrase to be used in the sanction of laws shall be the following: "The national Congress of the Republic of _____ sanctions with the force of Law." For the promulgation of laws, the tenor of the formula shall be: "Be it enacted as a law of the Republic, published, and entered in the Official Register" (Registro Oficial).
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<center>Chapter VI<br><u>Delegated Committee of Congress</u></center>
<center>Chapter VI<br><u>Delegated Committee of Congress</u></center>
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<u>Article.</u> Prior to adjourning, each chamber shall each year appoint, by an absolute majority, the fifteen deputies and ten senators who shall together constitute the Delegated Committee of Congress, which shall act until the following session. The Committee shall elect its officers, and shall give written notice thereof to the other powers of the State. It may conduct a valid session with the presence of a simple majority of its members. In matters put to a vote, in case of a tie, the chairman shall decide.
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<u>Article.</u>
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<u>Article.</u> The Delegated Committee, in addition to the powers which this Constitution expressly confers upon it, shall have the following:
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(1) To issue its own rules of procedure;
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<br>(2) To decide on matters within its competence; during the adjournment of Congress, to receive the bills introduced and proposals addressed to the chambers and turn them over for action in the committees of the chamber to which they are addressed, so that they may be acted upon at the next period of sessions;
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<br>(3) To issue on its own motion or on the proposal of the executive branch, the convocation of the Congress or of a single chamber to extraordinary sessions, in both cases the vote of two thirds of the individuals present being necessary. The call shall set forth the purpose or purposes of the extraordinary sessions;
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<br>(4) To exercise any other powers assigned to it by this Constitution and the laws.
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<u>Article.</u> The Delegated Committee shall inform each chamber of its actions and shall be responsible before the chambers for the measures that it may adopt or authorize.
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==<center>'''TITLE VI'''<br><u>The Executive Branch</u></center>==
==<center>'''TITLE VI'''<br><u>The Executive Branch</u></center>==

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