Title: NATIONAL POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS,
1NATIONAL POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS,
2Constitutions and Formal Structures of Government
- Traditional tripartite division of power
Executive - Strong executives go back to role of
Spanish/Portuguese kinds during the reconquest - Center of governmental power since independence
in Latin American states - President/dictators tendeded to remain in office
for decades in the first century after
independence - Nation building
- Violence
- Monarchical tradition
3Latin American Political Systems Historically
Favor Executive Power
- Spain and the adelantados
- Tentativeness of imperial power on the large
estates - Destruction of central authority in the
independence struggle
- Gen. Manuel Rosas (Argentina)
4More on Executive Dominance
- Longevity in power was accompanied by
- human rights abuses
- Development of cult of personality
- Denigration of rules, procedures and the law
5Longevity of personalistic presidencies spawns
limits on reelection in Second Wave Democracies
- Diaz in Mexico (1877-1910)
- Juan Vicente Gomez in Venezuela (1907 1935)
- Trujillo in the Dominican Republic (1932-1961)
- Rafael Trujillo (Dominican Republic)
6Presidentialism Predominates in the Third Wave
but
- Limits on reelection dissipate
- One additional presidential term becoming more
common in Third Wave democracies - Presidential dictators appear in the
twenty-first century?
7Constitutions and Formal Structures of Government
- More on the executive
- Multiple executive a failure (Uruguay)
- Some experimentation with parliamentary system
- Brazil (1961-63)
- Peru prime minister assists the president in
administering the bureaucracy - Vice presidents
- viewed with suspicion
- Sometimes bypassed when presidency becomes vacant
8Constitutions and Formal Structures of Government
- Traditional tripartite division of power
- Bicameral most common
- States and regions represented in upper chamber
- Population based lower chambers
- Argentine National Congress
9Constitutions and Formal Structures of Government
- Common in smaller and centralized states
- Questioning of the utility of upper chamber in
Venezuelan constitution of 1999
- El Salvador Legislative Assembly
10Strengthening the Legislative Institution
- Generally subservient to the executive
- Tradition of executive dominance
- Personalism is culturally valued
- Patronage tends to flow from the executive
- Party discipline of individual legislators
- Efforts to increase autonomy/power of legislature
- Brazil 1992
- Venezuela 1993
11Constitutions and Formal Structures of Government
- National court system
- Most law based on code model (Roman law modified
by Napoleon) - Dependent on executive whim in traditional
dictatorships - Special courts
- Military (fuero)
- Labor)
- State courts traditionally tied to local
political structure - Municipal courts relatively minor importance
- Traffic violations
- Enforcement of zoning
- Brasilia
- Supreme Court of Brazil
12Checks and Balances Judiciary
- Justices named for a fixed term
- Writs of AMPARO
13Beyond the Tripartite Division of Constitutional
Powers
- Peoples Power (ombudsman function)
- Electoral Power
- National Electoral Council named through
political interaction involving national
executive, legislature and political parties - Regional or state electoral councils report to
National Electoral Council
14Autonomy of State Local Governments
- Characteristic of larger countries
- Provides some independence for regional leaders
- Local culture and customs have more influence
- Often violated in practice
- Boundaries and powers of regional governments
laid out in constitution
15Centralism remains a powerful force
- Regional governments function as administrative
subdivisions of the national government - Characteristic of small countries
- Local culture and customs less given less
importance
- Regional governments administrative subdivisions
of national government
- Unitary state organization
16Checks and Balances State Local Governments
- Decentralization currently in vogue
- More participation
- More efficiency in resource allocation
- Strong resistance continues
- Opposition to decentralization remains
deep-seated - Castro in Cuba
- Chavez in Venezuela