-
Website
http://themoderatevoice.com/ -
Original page
http://themoderatevoice.com/38390/honduras-and-the-rule-of-law/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
superdestroyer
1859 comments · 63 points
-
kathykattenburg
1926 comments · 1145 points
-
runasim
1626 comments · 143 points
-
GeorgeSorwell
1840 comments · 643 points
-
Father_Time
1381 comments · 448 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Glenn Greenwald Hits The Healthcare Debate Nail On The Head
16 hours ago · 20 comments
-
Howard Dean’s Bombshell
2 days ago · 100 comments
-
Congress Has Really Dropped The Ball On Its Most Pressing Concern (P.S. Not Healthcare)
13 hours ago · 11 comments
-
SNEAKY END-RUN ON HEALTHCARE
11 hours ago · 9 comments
-
I’m Not Phil Ochs Anymore
5 hours ago · 3 comments
-
Glenn Greenwald Hits The Healthcare Debate Nail On The Head
http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2009/07...
"Every branch of government sided against Zelaya and Congress began discussing impeachment proceedings. Acting on orders from the Honduran Supreme Court, soldiers arrested Zelaya on June 28 and sent him into exile in Costa Rica. "
Did you catch the key part there? "began discussing impeachment proceededings."
All they had to do was finish. And no, you can't do a "defacto one day impeachment" when your constitution has procedures in place for an actual impeachment. Defending the current situation is not defending the rule of law. It's the opposite. With everything you've been pointing out, even you should be able to see that it would be no problem whatsoever to drum up the support to impeach him and most certainly prevent him from holding up the due electoral process. What happened there was a coup even if the military didn't "take over" afterward. That distinction is not germane to this discussion.
125-3 hmmm (that was the Hoduran Congress vote to remove Zelaya, including 59 of 62 memebers of his own party)
Lets play make believe for a minute.
Democratic Congressmen Charles Rangel, Dennis Kucinich, and Edward Kennedy (who was roused from his hospital bed to cast his vote) went against the impeachment proceedings of President Barack Obama which enjoyed overwhelming bilateral support after President Obama attempted to force through an executive order allowing him a third term which was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Rep Maxine Waters (D-CA) remarked "This is a sad day, but the Constitution must be upheld. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi added, "Although this situation was caused by the Republican Party and their reasonless opposition to everything President Obama tried to do, he still has to go. Vice President Joe Biden will be confirmed as President as per the Constitional sucession. Biden made a brief comment, "We must move forward, and I will uphold the duties of the office to the best of my ability. Its all about that 10 letter word the C-O-N-S-T-I-T-U-T-I-O-N." Biden, when asked by a reporter if he was happy to be the next President responded ""Give me a f**king break."" It was uncertain if Biden realized there was an open microphone nearby.
Once again, HERE are the facts. If you want to argue them, cite sections of the Constitution and translations of the factual basis of your diatribes. I call BS on talking points. The Honduran Constitution is a public document, as is the precise wording of Zelaya's proposed ballot measure. Legality is very precise in these matters. It is pointless to argue what Zelaya's intent was. The TEXT of what he proposed does not appear to violate the Constitution. The military removal of a sitting president DOES violate the Constitution.
For those asserting that Zelaya violated the Honduran constitution, but more for those who want an accurate analysis of the situation, here are the facts, with citations to the Honduran Constitution:
Here's the translated text of the referendum
If you want to check the translation, the original in Spanish is HERE.
Now, what about those who took over? How are they doing as "white hat" good guys?
And so today, Honduras said goodbye to the following articles of its Constitution:
Jazz is exactly right. Despite what some commenters on TMV have asserted, the Honduran Constitution does have an impeachment clause, just like our Constitution, and it is and should be the process for removing the president, should that be legally justified under Honduran law. It appears that Zelaya crafted a "referendum" that was not illegal, did not call for amending the current Constitution and did not call for allowing a second presidential term, nor allowing a former president to stand for future electionl
First, you need to add in the step that the ENTIRE Congress of the United States, both House and Senate, voted UNANIMOUSLY to remove the President.
Since our Constitution allows the House to IMPEACH a President and the Senate to vote to remove him if the charges are founded. Therefore the actions of the Honduras Congress amounts to an instant one day impeachment.
Nextg, this step is also incorrect. "The Supreme Court orders the Joint Chiefs to arrest Obama and Chief Justice John Roberts swears in Mitch McConnell as president."
What is wrong with your hypothetical here is "Mitch McConnell" is a Republican. He is not next in line per the Constitution of the United States.
You would need to insert 'Nancy Pelosi' in here as she is currently third in line. The reason it would not be 'Joe Biden' the second in line, is because to keep the hypothetical true to their situation, Joe Biden has resigned his office of Vice President so that he could run for the Presidency and the Vice Presidency has not yet been filled.
The Honduran Congress put in charge the person who was next in line per their Constitution!
So the army, knowing it is committing an illegal act, believes it will be acquitted "because of the circumstances." Circumstances that justify violation of 6 articles of the country's constitution?
Cryos cites articles 237, 239 and 242 which I have shown his actions did not violate. Cryos has not ventured an opinion about how the poll Zelaya wanted violates any of them. I've read it and can't see any grounds for conviction there. As to what he may have said that was not in his ballot initiative (legal as noted above), civilized nations can't convict for crimes not committed. The law, despite the snarling, angry, insult peppered rants that apparently pass for debate in your corner of the playpen, is clear on these matters.
Agreed, but his term is not yet up.
but his term is not yet up
Not at all. He is not allowed to run again, is not a candidate in the November elections, and even if his ballot measure passed, would not--could not--possibly have a new Constitution by then (1-2 years is the estimate of experts).
Not illegal. In fact, a consitiuent assembly is the only legitimate way to rewrite the constitution. "President Zelaya intended to perform a non-binding public consultation, about the conformation of an elected National Constituent Assembly. To do this, he invoked article 5 of the Honduran “Civil Participation Act” of 2006. According to this act, all public functionaries can perform non-binding public consultations to inquire what the population thinks about policy measures." CS, his opponents ripped up that poor country to prevent a non-binding poll? I consider you pretty reasonable. Can't imagine you think this is a reasonable response to a president calling for a poll of the people.
Then a 5th grader could answer it. You cannot.
They could obey their laws that forbid expatriating Hondurans, forbid conviction without trial, etc.
So now I'm a liar too? That's uncalled for. I've had quite enough of you two. Believe what you want.
You seem to want to become an overnight Honduras Constitutional expert, and to try and prove every branch of the Honduras government, and Zelaya's own party (except 3 people), were wrong in what they did.
I still say it goes back to the the fact that you cannot tolerate a Leftist being removed from power by the very government you now seem hell-bent on proving is illegitimate. Seems you want to overthrow the will of the entire government of Honduras because, well, what they did, believing themselves to be acting fully within the law, makes you unhappy.
Oh yeah, and because you now know Honduras Constitutional law better than any man or woman alive, Honduran or otherwise, Honduran Supreme Court member or otherwise, Honduran Congressman or otherwise.
In fact, from the sounds of it, the only person on the face of the earth remotely qualified to run that country is now...YOU!
At least in your somewhat overinflated opinion of yourself on this topic
From At Largely
So what is your defense for the actions of Zelaya? If he is going to clearly violate the Constitution AND change it permanently, what is wrong with taking him from power so that the Constitution can stay intact and not be changed without going through the proper channels? He fired many top military leaders so that he could use the military to his advantage to enforce the changes that he wanted. I'm glad that the military remembered that they are to defend their country and not just the president.
Thank you for letting the people of Honduras know how to run their country. Both sides were in violation of their Constitution but one was a power grab and one was to make sure the Constitution was not changed illegally. I'm sure there could have been a better way to get rid of mini-Chavez, but shipping him out in his PJs was how they did it. They didn’t want him to complete his one sided referendum with no oversight that he was going to do the next day because they know that Chavez was a puppet master of all of this.
You know Jazz, there are some in Punditville that would be ecstatic at your above statement and cheer it as "America Being Strong" (yeah, strongly stupid). But your right, that would be the end of America as we know it. The Supreme Court getting rid of a U.S. President by force??? I would have a mini-heart atttack.
My, what thin skin you have for GD. You also seem to think he needs your protection. I have not found GD needing others to speak on his behalf, myself.
Go back to stroking your putter. You are better at that.
The clause cited as an impeachment clause is vague. It says basically that the government can investigate any public official. However, as Jazz wrote a half mile up this thread, Congress had begun discussing impeachment, so presumably they think there's a way to do that. But there is nothing in their constitution that shields any Honduran from prosecution for breaking Honduran law. That includes the Courts, the Congress and the Military, all of whom have CLEARLY violated the law, as I have cited.
Now, time for you to defend YOUR heroes, the military and the new government. They broke into the presidential residence, beat Zelaya (according to his wife), fired rifles in the residence, though none in Zelaya's family were armed, threatened to kill Zelaya and his family. Tanks in the streets, firing tear gas, electricity and phone service cut, press freedom suspended, right to peaceful assembly suspended. You know what? If it looks like a coup, sounds like a coup and reads like a coup, it's probably a coup.
I have friends in Honduras. At no time in Zelaya's rule did they fear for their homes, their businesses, their investments. Now they are VERY concerned. Tourism, once among the brightest spots in the economy (say, a week ago), has crashed. This is NOT a good thing for Honduras. Suffering four more months of Zelaya's rule sure seems like the better option to me, not to mention, it IS the legal option.
But Honduras's constitution has changed since then, as to the relevant provisions like impeachment.
As a result, scholars have argued that there isn't a viable impeachment mechanism in the constitution.
By contrast, the military was expressly authorized to do what it did both by the country's supreme court and by Article 272 of the Honduran Constitution.
(The U.S. has used the military to enforce court orders too, as in Cooper v. Aaron, where federal troops were called out to desegregate the Little Rock Public Schools in response to a governor's defiance of a court order).
You are not helping your case by ranting about "dictators." WHAT DID ZELAYA DO? He didn't call for extension of his term, nor for amendment of the current constitution, nor for any powers whatsoever. Come on, man. Trying to have a discussion here. What do you have?
Oh, by the way, I failed to mention that in Honduras, as here, the president is the commander in chief of the military. The SC had no right to reinstate a general who had committed subordination.
Illegal activity is not necessary to impeach someone, it merely has to be activity that is unacceptable to a majority of the Congress. I think the only way for this argument to be solved is to see the applicable impeachment clauses of the Honduran Constitution.
I do think the use of the military was excessive and probably unconstitutional, but that is a separate question from whether his removal from office was appropriate.
"No citizen who has already served as head of the Executive Branch can be President or Vice-President. Whoever violates this law or proposes its reform, as well as those that support such violation directly or indirectly, will immediately cease in their functions and will be unable to hold any public office for a period of 10 years."
-- Article 239 of Honduras's Constitution
http://www.honduras.net/honduras_constitution2..
Note the words "immediately cease" Zalaya was warned and continued and the Supreme Court made a ruling and called in the army to enforce that constitutional requirement for immediate removal.
I do see the Honduran nationals point.
When it comes to the survival of your homeland, you not as prone to be academic as you can be from a palatial retreat high up in the Catskills.
But, Hondurans also need to realize Obama is going to be prone to the same academics because he too is not feeling the heat.
Sure glad you guys aren't MY lawyers. There is a picture of the ballot box at my link above. There is no hidden text in what Zelaya proposed, and whether you like him or not, whether I like him or not (I don't), you have to DO something illegal to be unlawful.
GD said"Of course your detractors here, they are the true arbiters of fact and justice of the world. They are so much smarter than Obama, Clinton, the UN, the OAS, European leaders or legal scholars. They are, after all, BLOG COMMENTERS. /sarcasm"
Of course you know you can turn this right around and say the the Honduran Supreme Court should be the defining voice in the argument. We certainly believe that here in the US (about our court and the constitution). Right now you have that they should of kept him in country while the Congress voted him out, which they did 120 something to 3. Ok they violated his rights because they got scared there might be riots or an actual takeover of govt if they F. U. the deal. So? Why would that make his being voted out invalid?
Discussion of US law is not relevant. Discussion of the use of the military also is irrelevant to the issue of whether the Congress and Court were acting within Honduran law in deciding to remove Zalaya. I agree the use of the military to enforce a warrant seems excessive, although whether that is legal or not in Honduras is less clear.
If someone can point out where they even CAN formally impeach please do. The MSM isn't proving any relevant facts so minor sites and blogs are the only places with real facts.
Despite what some commenters on TMV have asserted, the Honduran Constitution does have an impeachment clause, just like our Constitution, and it is and should be the process for removing the president, should that be legally justified under Honduran law.
===================================
Could you post that impeachment clause? I've heard several people SAY there is a clause but no one can manage to paste it in. You pasted in other articles not the impeachment clause.
Also you should reference articles 237, 239 and 242, Zelaya WAS acting unconstitutionally and only agreed to make the referendum non-binding at the last minute after multiple rebukes by the Supreme Courrt.
Pasting information directly from sites like commondreams.org and obamaers.com is fine but it also reveals the viewpoint you are taking. It is your right to do so but pasting information from articles named like "Totalitarian Rightists Put Orwellian Spin on Honduras Coup" is not exactly factually based information.
Once again simply put in the impeachment process.
It doesn't make a viewpoint invalid but when I want to learn about something I would suggest looking at a ton of different news sources not merely finding one that justifies a desired viewpoint and repeating it.
"They are so much smarter than Obama, Clinton, the UN, the OAS, European leaders or legal scholars."
ha ha ha. You got it all wrong. I'm not saying, and I know the others on here are not saying, that we are SMARTER than the above noted people. The above noted have to play ploitics with this deal, and supporting the will of the people is not how they are playing it, they are playing to the leader. The msdia for the most part except a few (I hope you watched the New Hour on PBS last night to hear some coverage of the other side). We don't have a strategic interest in the debate as all the above noted people do. If the OAS and the US were to back the new Honduran government, it would be a slap in the face of Chavez. Nether the OAS or the US is trying to piss of Chavez. I don't care if he gets mad so I speak freely. At the end of the day the Honduran people are in support of this change including the Catholic Church, so why does the rest of the world get to tell the people of Honduras how to run their government?
"Sure glad you guys aren't MY lawyers."
I'm glad you are just a random blogger who thinks other countries have the right to tell other countries how to run their government. The will of the people has been fulfilled, deal with it. The man was trying to pull a Chavez power grab and the leaders stood up for the country. A country is defined not by its leaders but by its people. Americans can have trouble understanding that because you worship pop icons like Michael Jackson and presidents like Obama. You think resolutions have to be passed through governments instead of the will of the people being listened to. The will of the people and maintaining the Constitution is more important.
==========================
Without an impeachment clause how is Honduras supposed to carry out its constitutional duty to immediately remove the president since he refused to remove himself?
Granted this was a bad move on their part and hopefully that part of their constitution can be altered to allow future impeachment proceedings but the law is murky in that area.
I don't think there is an impeachment clause and unless you prove otherwise it makes your initial post moot. The MSM doesn't have anything on impeachment whatsoever and I am unable to find one anywhere so I think the impeachment issue is an empty dishonest talking point to support pre-determined conclusions.
Maybe you are fine with socialist dictators breaking the constitutional law and not being held accountable due to technicalities but fortunately for Hondurans their government decided otherwise.
Score in Honduras.
Continued subjucation to leftist dictators whose goal is absolute power and control: 0
Republic saved from latin america dictatorship takeovers and checks and balances: 1
Continued subjucation to leftist dictators whose goal is absolute power and control: 0
Republic saved from latin america dictatorship takeovers and *good use of government checks and balances*: 1
I added a little emphasis to point out the part about impeachment.
IE you can't find the impeachment process. Perfect example why blinding believing leftist agenda sites (or right agenda sites) is a bad idea. Articles 237, 239 and 242 are relevant to the situation. To Sorwell a wikipedia reference with no backup means absolutely nothing.
""You are not helping your case by ranting about "dictators." WHAT DID ZELAYA DO? He didn't call for extension of his term, nor for amendment of the current constitution, nor for any powers whatsoever. Come on, man. Trying to have a discussion here. What do you have?""
You are wrong from my understanding. He called for EXACTLY THAT and only made the resolution proposal non-binding at the last minute. Also forcibly removing the ballots to distribute against the order of the court I believe was illegal
So you danced around the issue. Are you fine with socialist dictators breaking the constitutional law and not being held accountable due to technicalities? IE if a president breaks the law and there is not a clearly defined process in place to remove him do you believe leaving him in office is the only solution even if the constitution calls for otherwise?
And GreenDreams you are merely parroting others viewpoints that is not trying to have a dicussion. I at least can formulate my own thoughts and am not relying on pathetic partisan sites to make my argument for me. Anyone can be a tape recorder and merely regurgitate partisan op-ed material. I prefer a thinking brain.
Until someone can point it out I have to assume it is purposely not being investigated because it defies the leftist talking points.
Kind of like how people love to discuss the economic/housing situation and try to act like Freddie/Fannie don't exist, aren't costing $400 billion in bailouts and aren't paying out bigger bonuses than AIG. Yet Fannie/Freddie magically receives no notice.
Once again danced around the issue. If there is not an official documented process for removing Zelaya but it is shown he violated constitution clauses what should Honduras do? It's a simple question.
Checks and balances.
It relies on a 1995 Merrill analysis of the Honduras Constitution.
But the article it cites was apparently amended (repealed in part) as to impeachment subsequently, a few years later.
Thus, some scholars, like Juan Carlos Hidalgo, say there isn't a viable impeachment mechanism in the Honduran Constitution now.
That buttresses the argument that Honduras acted legally and democratically in removing its ruler (the use of the military doesn't change that, since Article 272 of the Constitution gives the military the power to enforce term limits, i.e., the alternation of succession, and since the military is used to enforce the law in other countries as well -- think of federal troops enforcing court desegregation orders in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957, against the state's governor).
It is a strange Constitution, but we have no right to disregard it -- they've held democratic elections for far longer than most of their neighboring countries, who now are hypocritically attacking them for booting out their scofflaw ex-president.
If, on the other hand, the Constitution contained a well defined means of impeaching Zelaya for the alleged infractions and those procedures were completely ignored, then the actions of the courts and military are more suspect.
It is interesting that some bloggers and commenters feel so sure that they know which is the case even before they've seen the evidence, and interesting too that some authors being cited here have apparently taken the time to selectively translate certain articles of the Honduran Constitution which show violations by the military in this case (violations which are not even being denied, although the accused apparently feel that there was justification for the infractions), while there hasn't been a similar effort to address the other pertinent question of whether or not there was a more legitimate process encoded in the Constitution for Zelaya's removal from office after he ignored the country's Supreme Court rulling and fired military leaders who were attempting to enforce the court's ruling rather than obey his orders.
At least the Obama administration has said that it is investigating the circumstances before judging whether or not the removal of Zelaya was legal or extralegal. Maybe others ought to similarly reserve judgement.
Sorry for the delay, I had lunch and meetings. If you are not aware of the laws he broke, I don't blame you because your media has not covered it. I didn't address it because I assume that with all the dribble you wrote (which I didn't not have time to read all of it) that you know about him breaking in to the military facility where the ballots were being kept (not to mention his evolvement in the drug trade). I think the way they sent him out of the country was ill-advised, but at the end of the day, the result was the will of the people and good for the country. Please read the following article if you would like to know what is really going on. If you can't read Spanish like I can, you really haven't been able to read or hear of the things this man was doing. The English speaking media is not covering this other than making Zelaya look like a victim. If you are not aware of the steps that Chavez took to become the tyrannical leader that he is today, you may not understand that he was using the Chavez playbook on how retain power and oppress your people. Honduras did not want to be the next land of Chavez. If you think that Chavez is a good guy than you are either ill-informed or you are a strict leftist. If you are a leftist than more power to you but that makes your opinion as about as fair as Chavez himself.
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp...
I would love to jump into the discussion, but I am afraid it would take me a couple of weeks, at least, to get up to speed on Honduras Supreme Court, Legislature, AG, documents,decisions, amendments, legislation, court cases, precedents, etc., etc., to be able to intelligently debate these issues, even though I am fluent in Spanish--but I'll resist.
I do, however, "admire" those who are debating this based on information from Wikipedia
(I have to admit, I have done so myself)
As the guy who cited the Wikipedia, thanks for your "admiration".
Although I wasn't even aware that you specifically used Wikipedia, you are welcome.
As I said, I have done so myself.
I was just an observation
Also, it seems that the charges that led to his arrest had to do with him illegally ordering the referendum question on the ballots- not the substance of what the ballot question was but the fact that he was trying to circumvent the Constitution to do this at all. Apparently only the Congress can put a referendum on the ballot, and the Congress opposed this move. He ordered the military to put it on the ballot anyway, and that was where the crisis began. So even if you are absolutely correct that his detractors are overstating what he tried to do in that referendum, that's besides the point when it comes to the legality questions. If Obama tried to tell election commissions in all the states to put a referendum on the ballot, no matter how innocuous the issue for vote actually was, it would still be illegal and he would be told that that's not the correct procedure. If he then defied those rulings, there would be a crisis that would have to be resolved in some fashion.
"None of you can show a shred of evidence that Zelaya 1) attempted to extend his term, 2) attempted to allow re-election of a former president, 3) attempted to amend the current 1982 Constitution."
This is a 5th grade argument. I guess the many months of him saying that the above noted points are exactly what he was going to do is not evidence enough for you??? And I'm sorry, but I could care less what your American friends in my country think. They are welcome to leave; international flights are still running in and out of Honduras, just not as many as usual.
Zelaya's family is still in Honduras and are not being threatened or beaten. I don't think the way they removed him from power was the best way to do it, but I doesn't mean that he deserves to be back in power. It is too late now for him to return, it will only cause violence. Real violence, not shipping people out in PJs or a kid getting shot off the airport fence he was trying to jump after being told he was going to be shot several times.
"press freedom suspended, right to peaceful assembly suspended" This statement is nothing more than false. The papers are running the tvs are playing and on American PBS Nightly News I saw an American reporter that was reporting from Tegucigalpa and was very free to do so. The right to peaceful assembly is still allowed and there are plenty of rallies that start and end peacefully. The reason some people have tear gas fired at them is because they throw rocks at the officers. If it was really "peaceful" they would not have tear gas shot at them.
I really doubt you even have friends in Honduras, sounds like a blogger soap box to me.
If a Leftist is thrown out of office by force for corruption and scandal with the backing of the courts and the legislative branches, it is a coup.
If a Rightist is thrown out of office for corruption and scandal with the backing of the courts and the legislative branches, it is the Will of the People.
See? Like I said, it is easy.
Not sure if you noticed it, but somewhere up there in this very thread, the commenter called Tegucigalpa is defending this whatever you want to call it against a leftist on the basis of "the will of the people".
I am not sure what to call it. It appears to me to be a typical example of a CALA region country that doesn't have a true, long-term history of 'rule of law' fighting over who violated their Constitution the least.
The thing I really do have trouble getting past is the unanimous Supreme Court and almost unanimous Legislative vote (only 3 dissenters??? the vast majority of his own party voting against him???). If this was the 'typical' coup, I would have expected the courts and legilative branches to be dissolved, or at a minimum his entire party (or vast majority) demanding his reinstatement.
That isn't happening, though. They themselves are almost to a man defending what was done as necessary, lawful, and constitutional under THEIR Constitution.
Overall, that makes me think that what they did was a lawful action by the Government of Honduras as a whole, whether I agree with it or not (and I do not know enough about Honduran politics to know that answer, frankly), and whether it would have been lawful under OUR Constitution.
It doesn't seem there are too many people in Honduras that want him to stay President.
I hear what you're saying. You may be right. And I'm not trying to defend Zelaya.
But the legality of the action doesn't seem completely obvious. Even though the extremity of the action does seem obvious.
But Honduras's constitution has changed since then, as to the relevant provisions like impeachment.
As a result, scholars have argued that there isn't a viable impeachment mechanism in the constitution.
By contrast, the military was expressly authorized to do what it did both by the country's supreme court and by Article 272 of the Honduran Constitution.
(The U.S. has used the military to enforce court orders too, as in Cooper v. Aaron, where federal troops were called out to desegregate the Little Rock Public Schools in response to a governor's defiance of a court order)
I'm sorry that Honduras's interpretation of their constitution conflicts with your "world view" that you feel should be imposed on everyone. I did not insult you and simply re-asked a couple simple questions which you refuse to answer. I'll repeat the questions so you can ignore them again.
If there is not an official documented process for removing Zelaya but it is shown he violated constitution clauses what should Honduras do?.
Another related question GreenDreams. If the Supreme Court, AG, legislature and Supreme Elections Tribunal are not qualified to determine what is constitutional who is qualified?
Only GreenDreams is, haven't you figured that out? :)
Honduras unida siempre, luchemos juntos por nuestro pais. That is all I have left to say.....
"Another related question GreenDreams. If the Supreme Court, AG, legislature and Supreme Elections Tribunal are not qualified to determine what is constitutional who is qualified?"
Only GreenDreams is, haven't you figured that out? :)
=========================
Lol that's the impression that I"m getting.
Just so you and any Hondurans know many americans strongly disagree with our government's stance is on this once more and more facts become available. Many people simply parrot what the biased media is saying but many of us also have figured out you have to dig and dig to find the real answers.
Good luck I hope Honduras continues to hold its ground since it appears to me that there is a world agenda here and Honduras is trying to defend its republic. Americans are doing the same right now unfortunately. Good luck!
If there is not an official documented process for removing Zelaya but it is shown he violated constitution clauses what should Honduras do?.
Another related question GreenDreams. If the Supreme Court, AG, legislature and Supreme Elections Tribunal are not qualified to determine what is constitutional who is qualified?
I haven't claimed any expertise on this topic.
However, earlier you made the following accusation toward GreenDreams: Calling him dishonest seemed both harsh and inaccurate. (And saying he just wanted to support a pre-determined conclusion seemed like the pot calling the kettle black.) So I spent about twenty seconds on Wikipedia to find some evidence of the existence of an impeachment process under the Honduran Constitution and when I found it I posted it for all to see.
Now, I recognize that Wikipedia-bashing is a popular sport on the internet. But the Wikipedia usually does provide sources for its information. I'm not sure anyone bothered to look for it, but the footnote for the portion I quoted went to this website.
Nobody has to love the Wikipedia. Nobody has to love the underlying source. But to call GreenDreams dishonest seemed objectively false. Evidence of impeachment procedures exists. I think you went too far when you did that, Cryos.
Again, I'm not an expert on this. But calling in the military to remove a democratically elected President is a very extreme action to undertake. I would guess that there were less draconian alternatives to his military expulsion from the country. It's hard to believe that a Constitution would make no judicial or quasi-judicial provision for the removal of its elected officials of the kind that we commonly call impeachment. I doubt that all the procedural alternatives were exhausted. I think they should have been exhausted before applying force.
Additionally, his expulsion has been called illegal by several external organizations, including the American State Department and the OAS. The objection against those judgments seems to be that they were just playing politics. But if the groups you've cited (the Supreme Court, AG, legislature and Supreme Elections Tribunal) did something illegal, why wouldn't try to cover themselves by claiming their actions were in fact constitutional--by, in short, playing some politics of their own?
I'm here defending the idea of the rule of law. I realize I'm not Jazz's favorite guy, but I think he got this right: "It’s the idea that the body of laws itself is the final arbiter - that no person or group of people is equal to or above those laws and the concepts they embody." I quoted from "A Man for All Seasons" to the effect that while the law may not provide convenient answers to problems you feel passionate about, the application of legal procedure protects the innocent as much as it protects Satan himself. And without its protections, the innocent will be subject to Satan's will.
I'm also here defending GreenDreams against the charges of dishonesty and bad faith.
And I don't think there's anything wrong with citing a reasonably-sourced Wikipedia article.
There are references to impeachment in the constitution so an argument can be made that there should of been a more formal process. But even if he was shipped out the votes showed conclusively that the "impeachment" was overwhelming. why should that "impeachment"(as good a term as any if not quite exact) be overturned because Zelaya wasn't in a jail cell in Honduras? That really is a big issue because there really seems no doubt that the only way Zelaya would be in power now would be thru extra legal means.
In addition the Honduran Constitution article against attempting, advocating, ect, ect, a second presidential term may very well make impeachment a moot point if he violated that article. (That the legislature was meeting to discuss impeachment does not mean that they had to impeach him if he violated that article or even that that violation was the reason for the prospective impeachment. There were many and massive reasons for conflict with the legislature and they may well have wanted to proceed even without that constitution basis.) Without having such a device in our constitution it seems strange but there seems to be argument that the language could eliminate the need for impeachment. That for other reasons the legislature could impeach the Pres, but if the Supreme Court found that there was a violation of that article of the constitution then that finding automatically strips the Pres of office.
Now we have heard that the final ballot of the "survey" the Zelaya was giving (please read massive sarcasm into the word survey) had nothing of term limits and him serving another term as Pres. This of course pays no attention to the other versions of the ballot that he put forth, his previously stated intentions, and his steadfast refusal to pay any attention to the laws of Honduras which did not give him the authority to "survey", that made it illegal to conduct his(or any) "survey' so close to an election, and the court orders preventing his actions. It is common sense that the Supreme Court would look at the issue in it's totality when making a decision and hard to ignore it without incredible condescension. As is those "people" are not qualified to make those type of decisions for themselves. They must be guided by those who know better.
Zelaya tried to hold a "consultation" (legally binding) for a November 2009 referendum on changes to the Honduran Constitution
Honduras' Supreme Court, attorney general, top electoral body, and human-rights ombudsman all ruled that the 28 June plebescite would be illegal.
Zelaya went ahead with it anyhow, had ballots printed in Venezuela, and announced that the vote would take place June 28,
Honduran Attorney General Luis Alberto Rubi took the case to court. The Honduran Supreme Court ruled the referendum to be illegal and ordered the ballots to be confiscated.
Zelaya ordered the Chief of the Army Romeo Vásquez Velásquez to distribute ballots per the military's role of assisting the Government of Honduras in conducting elections.
Vásquez refused to distribute the ballots after seeking legal opinions.
Zelaya fired him on 24 June 2009, the same day Minister of Defense, Edmundo Orellana resigned.
Zelaya and a group of supporters stormed an airforce base and seized the ballots and issue another executive decree, which directed government officials to set up 15,000 polling stations at schools and community buildings across the country.
In an attempt to counter the Supreme Court's argument that the proposed consultation was illegal, Zelaya reclassified the legally binding "consultation" as a non-legally binding "public opinion poll."
In response to a request from Attorney General Rubi, the Honduran Congress controlled by Zelaya's own party, opened an investigation into the president's mental stability and fitness to govern.
The Supreme Court ruled the dismissal illegal and reinstated Vásquez on 25 June 2009.
A detention order, signed 26 June by a Supreme Court judge, ordered the armed forces to detain the president
The military removed Zelaya from his home early on the morning of 28 June, before the polls open for his plebiscite and sent him into exile in Costa Rica
The Honduran Congress affirmed Zelaya's departure (125-3) and, in accord with the constitution, named Roberto Micheletti, who had been president of the Congress, as interim president of the country.
Chavez, Ortega, Castro and Bolivia's Evo Morales immediately condemned the "coup" demanding Zelaya be restored to power.
Chavez threatened military action
--------------------
Now given that course of events, who in their right mind would endorse putting Zelaya back in power? He disobeyed the Supreme Court, was kicked out by the Congress which his own party controlled and which all but 3 members voted in favor of the Supreme Courts removal of him, He stormed army bases with supporters taking away what the legal system had ordered to be held by the military, he tries to fire anyone disagreeing with him, the attorney general called for and the Congress was investigating his mental health,
That anyone would suggest this other than Chavez and his ilk is just mind boggling.
BTW more on that Congressional investigation:
Members of Congressional commission in charge of investigating Zelaya's actions have reportedly said that because the commission has concluded that Zelaya has broken the law, it would recommend to the entire Congress that Zelaya be removed from office. This was before his arrest.
http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2009/06/27/intern...
I especially enjoyed the Obama analogy. I thought of a very similar analogy last night, but mine was premised on Bush 43 refusing to leave office and ordering a referendum for a third term. Although my analogy becomes pretty far fetched when the Roberts Supreme Court rules against W, I still found the story more rousing with W as the villain bucking our presidential term limits . (The analogy gets truly scary when the Hon. John Roberts installs Dick Cheney as President!)
Gotta chuckle however at M.V. bloggers posing as Honduran constitutional scholars. "The Honduran constitution is really long (more than 300 pages, oh my!!) and it's in a really difficult foreign language called "spanish", so instead of actually spending an evening reading and studying it myself, I read a blog (less than a page long!) by a guy who isn't a Honduran constitutional lawyer or anything (nor is he even Honduran for that matter), but he says he has read the Honduran constitution, and he says..." ............... What a hoot!! ;)
Oh, Christine, you sly fox, you! I know you're just trying to make sure we're all awake and paying attention, right? Of course you know the answer to your statement -- it's too obvious for you not to know -- but you want to see if we know it, too. Right?
Perhaps you should just take my statement at face value- a reminder that none of us (I presume, at least) would say that there are no circumstances that would justify military intervention to overthrow an illegitimate government, or an elected government which is seen as illegally grabbing power beyond the mandate of the election. I think I was pretty clear also in stating that I don't know if that justification exists in the present case of Honduras or not, since unlike others here I don't feel that reliance on selective translations of portions of the Honduran Constitution would enable me to make that judgement.
Still though, I think you underestimate that if he truly was rhetorically threatening an illegal referendum which would have extended his term or permitted his running for another term, and ignoring court rulings against that, then even if he found a clever way (or perhaps, I'd conjecture, Chavez found a clever way) to look innocent by changing the format to one that would not have been illegal- then the legislative and judicial branches and the military may have overreacted but not without some reason for their belief that he had to be stopped quickly.
Maybe the debate is really showing the tendency of the Right to support any military overthrow of any government they consider illegitimate?
Except for the 'inconvenient truth' that it was not a military overthrow, unless your definition extends to the Honduras Supreme Court issuing a legal arrest warrant, the Military (as per the Honduras Constitution) executing said warrant, and the Honduras Congress, of which the deposed of President's party had a majority, voting 123-3 to support the removal of Zelaya, and replacing him with the next civilian in line for succession as per that same inconvenient Constitution.
The only error that occurred was the Military's, which has admitted in hindsight they should have taken him to jail rather than removed him from the country.
In case you haven't read the rest of this thread, there is some controversy about just how legal/illegal this action was.
You don't have possession of the high moral ground.
Even you admit that mistakes were made.
If you want to claim the right is just correct and the left is just wrong, go ahead. But because the rule of law was not obeyed, you're open to the utterly obvious parallel criticism.
Utterly obvious.
Um, sorry, a mistake in whether he should have been sent to jail or removed from the country does not invalidate all the previous actions of their Supreme Court and Congress, as much as you might want it to. It was an 'after the fact' error.
And it is not 'my' high ground - it is the position of both their Supreme Court and Congress. It is you, GD, and others on the Left that want to usurp their decisions, not the Right.
Let's see what true lawyers and lawblogs think, along with some actual Hondurans, shall we?
http://zerosheep.com/2009/07/01/no-coup-in-hond...
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2...
http://blogcritics.org/politics/article/preside...
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2009/07/h...
http://hondurascrisis.org/a-letter-to-the-inter...
http://www.tipte.com/2009/07/javier-corrales-is...
It seems to me that there's a lot more support for reinstatement of Zelaya being expressed by liberal commenters here than there is by conservative Americans saying that we should support his ousting. The few who are speaking out pretty forcefully for that are Honduran natives, not American conservatives.
My comment was addressed to Austin Roth, and contained an obvious, blocked quote, which was from Austin Roth.
Personal I can't think of anything more likely to destroy democracy in Honduras than returning Zelaya to power. He already proved he will not respect the law or the constitution.
He said that Zelaya's wife was beaten and his family is in trouble, haha. This proves once again that GD knows nothing about what is going on. He is trying to seem informed on the sitution more than the others on here. You know, because he has a bunch of friends there. Her beating was never reported in Honduras and she looks fine leading the rally in the below noted story. Haha. And there was no tear gas! It is not a police state. One more thing you are wrong about. Would you like to make any other false statements?
(since you can't read Spanish, the picture at the top of the article is la esposa de depuesto presidente Zelaya)
http://www.latribuna.hn/web2.0/?p=17176
I think it is time for everyone to not worry for a little bit. Presidente costarricense Oscar Arias will be a good mediator. Now that there is a way to tell both sides, things will get done and Zelaya will not be shown as a victim all the time.