Austria CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
Austria's parliament meets in this building in Vienna.
Courtesy Embassy of Austria, Washington
Austria is a parliamentary democracy of the kind that exists
in most of Western Europe. The legal basis for the Austrian
system of government is the constitution of 1920, which was
amended in 1929 and several times thereafter. The constitution of
1920 provided a transition from Austria-Hungary (also seen as the
Austro-Hungarian Empire) to a democratic federal republic in
which the law emanates from the people. The constitution was
suspended from 1934 to 1938 during the authoritarian
administrations of Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt von Schuschnigg
and again during the Anschluss that was forced on Austria by
Adolf Hitler from 1938 to 1945. Since 1945, when the Second
Republic was proclaimed, Austria has been governed by the 1920
constitution as amended.
Executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government
were established by the 1920 constitution, with the executive
branch subordinate to the legislative branch. The federal
presidency as established by the 1920 constitution was a weak
political office whose incumbent was elected by a joint session
of the bicameral legislature, the Bundesversammlung (Federal
Assembly). The constitutional amendments of 1929 increased the
president's political role by granting him the formal power to
appoint or dismiss the chancellor and, on the chancellor's
recommendation, the cabinet. The 1929 amendments also provided
that the right of electing the president be taken away from the
legislature and given to the people.
Austria's political system is federal in nature, reflecting
the fact that the country consists of nine provinces. Although
Article 15 of the constitution states that the provinces shall
have jurisdiction over all matters not explicitly reserved for
the federal government, Austrian federalism is weak and
underdeveloped. The areas of law reserved for the provinces are
few in number and relatively unimportant. Among the areas where
the federal government is almost exclusively responsible are
foreign affairs, national security, justice, finance, civil and
criminal law, police matters, and education. In other areas of
law, the provinces are called on to pass implementing legislation
for matters already decided at the federal level. This process,
known as indirect federal administration, applies to areas such
as elections, highway police, and housing affairs. Other laws are
made and administered at the provincial level, but within
federally established guidelines. These concern social welfare,
land reform, and provincial administration. Areas where the
provinces have primary authority include municipal affairs (for
example, trash removal and major aspects of zoning), preschool
and kindergarten, construction laws, fire control, and tourism.
The constitution does not include a bill of rights as such, but
it does guarantee equality before the law and further guarantees
that there shall be no discrimination because of birth, gender,
civil status, class, or religion. Individual rights are further
defined by inclusion in the constitution of the final article,
which raises certain older Austrian laws to the rank of
constitutional law. Among them is the Basic Law of December 1867,
which establishes equality before the law, inviolability of
property, and freedom of assembly, expression, and worship. Laws
promulgated in 1862 set forth individual rights regarding
personal liberty and one's home. These rights include not being
held without a warrant and, except in unusual circumstances, not
allowing homes to be searched without a warrant.
Some restrictions are placed on freedom of expression and
association. Proper authorities must be informed when a new
association is formed. Officials then have six weeks to object to
its formation if the group is thought to be illegal or a
potential threat to the republic. Since the Second Republic was
established in 1945, care has been taken to ensure that laws
concerning individuals are in accord with the United Nations
Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948.
Amendments to the constitution can be made through laws
designated constitutional laws or through constitutional
provisions if the amendment is part of another law. Passage of an
amendment requires a two-thirds majority vote in the presence of
at least one-half the members of the Nationalrat (National
Council), parliament's lower house. Constitutional laws or
provisions are accompanied by a national referendum only if
requested by one-third of the deputies of either the Nationalrat
or the Bundesrat (Federal Council), parliament's upper house. In
1984 a constitutional amendment provided that amendments changing
the division of responsibilities between the federal government
and the provinces require the approval of two-thirds of the
Bundesrat as well as two-thirds of the Nationalrat.
In addition to the amended constitution, two laws--a treaty
and a constitutional law--are particularly important to the
constitutional development of Austria because they concern the
country's international status and reaffirm the people's basic
rights. In April 1955, a stalemate over the restoration of full
sovereignty to Austria was finally broken when the Soviet Union
agreed to drop its insistence that a solution to the Austrian
question be tied to the conclusion of a peace treaty with
Germany. This paved the way for the signing of the State Treaty
in May 1955 by the Four Powers (Britain, France, the Soviet
Union, and the United States) and Austria. The treaty established
Austria's frontiers as those existing on January 1, 1938, and
forbade economic or political union with Germany. Rights to a
democratic government and free elections were guaranteed, and the
document reiterated guarantees of fundamental rights and
freedoms, including equal rights for minorities. Specifically
mentioned in this category were Slovenes and Croats. The second
law of constitutional importance is the Federal Constitutional
Law of October 26, 1955, on the Neutrality of Austria. The law
declared the country's permanent neutrality and prohibited it
from entering into military alliances or allowing foreign
countries to establish military bases within the borders of
Austria.
Data as of December 1993
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