Public intervention in the selection of candidates by political parties
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/trc.35.2015.14918Keywords:
political parties, public intervention, selection of candidates,Abstract
This paper addresses the limits of public intervention in the selection of candidates by political parties. The issue is analyzed from the comparative perspective, although some documents of soft law adopted by the Venice Commission, OSCE, and ODIHR have also been taken into account. The study concludes that the legislation on political parties has increased in the last decade. However, the main constraints imposed on political parties do not come from specific legislation on political parties but from electoral laws. In some cases, the electoral laws impose a method of decision making on the nomination process since these laws require political parties compliance with the basic rules of the democratic principle. In other cases, the laws do not impose a method but a result, as in the case of case of the laws which impose quotas in favor of women. In any case, such measures should meet certain conditions to be effective. Firstly, the limits must respect the freedom of association proclaimed by international treaties and ensured by the ECHR; secondly, the requirements must be compatible with the electoral system; finally, any exigency on candidate selection must be guaranteed by monitoring systems and by sanctions for non-compliance.Downloads
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Published
2015-01-01
How to Cite
Biglino Campos, P. (2015). Public intervention in the selection of candidates by political parties. Teoría y Realidad Constitucional, (35), 203–223. https://doi.org/10.5944/trc.35.2015.14918
Issue
Section
Estudios