Voting Rights and Suffrage/History/Country sources/Mongolia: Difference between revisions
Import-sysop (talk | contribs) (transformed) |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|question=Country sources | |question=Country sources | ||
|questionHeading=What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right? | |questionHeading=What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right? | ||
|breakout=Mongolia | |||
|pageLevel=Breakout | |pageLevel=Breakout | ||
| | |contents=Chapter IV, Articles 34 and 35 of the 1924 Constitution of the Mongolian People's Republic outlined the right to vote, identifying groups included and excluded from this right. Article 34 reads: "The right to elect and to be elected to the Assemblies (Great, Small and local) is enjoyed by the following categories of citizens of the Republic of both sexes who have reached the age of 18 years by the day of the elections: - | ||
(a) Those who earn their livelihood by their own labour, and also persons occupied in labour on their own account. | |||
(b) Soldiers of the people's revolutionary army." | |||
Article 35 reads: "The following cannot elect or be elected:-- | |||
(a) Persons who live exclusively by the exploitation of others with the manifest object of enrichment. | |||
(b) Merchants and usurers who live by the labour of others and on interest from capital and income. | |||
(c) Former princes, hutuktus and members of religious bodies who de facto reside permanently in monasteries. | |||
(d) Persons legally declared insane or mentally deranged. | |||
(e) Persons sentenced by a court for crimes inspired by personal advantage or of an opprobrious character." | |||
Article 71 of the 1940 Constitution of the Mongol People's Republic guaranteed the right to vote, though it named a large number of groups that were excluded from this right. In 1944 this article was amended to read: "All citizens of the Mongol People's Republic, who have reached the age of eighteen, have the right to participate in elections and to be elected, irrespective of their sex, nationality, religion, education, nomadic or settled mode of life, and property status, with the exception of the insane and persons convicted by the court, whose sentence includes deprivation of electoral rights." | |||
According to Article 21, members of The State Great Hural shall be elected by citizens who are qualified to vote, via universal, free, and direct voting. Under Article 31, each political party in The State Great Hural may provide one nominated presidential candidate which the citizens may vote on. (Constitute Project, “Mongolia’s Constitution of [[Probable year:: 1992]] with Amendments through [[Probable year:: 2001]]”). | |||
References: | |||
1924 Constitution of the Mongolian People's Republic: British and Foreign State Papers (1931) https://heinonline-org.proxygw.wrlc.org/HOL/Page?collection=cow&handle=hein.cow/bfsprs0134&id=1244&men_tab=srchresults | |||
“Constitution of the Mongol People’s Republic.” World Constitutions Illustrated, Heinonline. Accessed July 27, 2023. https://heinonline.org/HOL/P?h=hein.cow/cososnat0002&i=735 | |||
“Mongolia 1992 (rev. 2001).” Constitute. https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Mongolia_2001 | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 02:26, 22 April 2024
What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?
Mongolia
Chapter IV, Articles 34 and 35 of the 1924 Constitution of the Mongolian People's Republic outlined the right to vote, identifying groups included and excluded from this right. Article 34 reads: "The right to elect and to be elected to the Assemblies (Great, Small and local) is enjoyed by the following categories of citizens of the Republic of both sexes who have reached the age of 18 years by the day of the elections: - (a) Those who earn their livelihood by their own labour, and also persons occupied in labour on their own account. (b) Soldiers of the people's revolutionary army." Article 35 reads: "The following cannot elect or be elected:-- (a) Persons who live exclusively by the exploitation of others with the manifest object of enrichment. (b) Merchants and usurers who live by the labour of others and on interest from capital and income. (c) Former princes, hutuktus and members of religious bodies who de facto reside permanently in monasteries. (d) Persons legally declared insane or mentally deranged. (e) Persons sentenced by a court for crimes inspired by personal advantage or of an opprobrious character."
Article 71 of the 1940 Constitution of the Mongol People's Republic guaranteed the right to vote, though it named a large number of groups that were excluded from this right. In 1944 this article was amended to read: "All citizens of the Mongol People's Republic, who have reached the age of eighteen, have the right to participate in elections and to be elected, irrespective of their sex, nationality, religion, education, nomadic or settled mode of life, and property status, with the exception of the insane and persons convicted by the court, whose sentence includes deprivation of electoral rights."
According to Article 21, members of The State Great Hural shall be elected by citizens who are qualified to vote, via universal, free, and direct voting. Under Article 31, each political party in The State Great Hural may provide one nominated presidential candidate which the citizens may vote on. (Constitute Project, “Mongolia’s Constitution of 1992 with Amendments through 2001”).
References:
1924 Constitution of the Mongolian People's Republic: British and Foreign State Papers (1931) https://heinonline-org.proxygw.wrlc.org/HOL/Page?collection=cow&handle=hein.cow/bfsprs0134&id=1244&men_tab=srchresults
“Constitution of the Mongol People’s Republic.” World Constitutions Illustrated, Heinonline. Accessed July 27, 2023. https://heinonline.org/HOL/P?h=hein.cow/cososnat0002&i=735
“Mongolia 1992 (rev. 2001).” Constitute. https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Mongolia_2001