Friday, July 10, 2009
Back to Honduras ...
Very interesting piece in The New Republic (7/10/09), by David Fontana of George Washington Law, here.
Honduras and Constitutional Democracy
Here in the United States, the removal of President Manuel Zelaya of
Honduras has prompted disparate reactions from the political right and
political left. Conservatives (fearing the influence of Hugo
Chavez and his authoritarian brand of politics, with which Zelaya had
aligned himself) have tended to side with the coup leaders. Liberals
(fearing a return to the era of Latin American military coups) have
tended to side with Zelaya. But both sides are missing a layer of complexity, one that suggests
the Honduras crisis isn't an easy case of heroes and villains. What is
taking place in Honduras is actually a debate over an old and difficult
question: Can a democratically enacted change to a constitution be
itself unconstitutional? [Read the rest, here.]
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2009/07/back-to-honduras-.html