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![]() Seal of the Legislative Yuan | |
Legislative Yuan | |
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Citation | "Referendum Act". Laws & Regulations Database of The Republic of China. June 17, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2014. |
Territorial extent | Taiwan |
Passed | November 27, 2003 |
Commenced | December 31, 2003 |
Amended by | |
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Summary | |
Provides legal framework and process for citizens to exercise the constitutional right to referendum in the Republic of China. | |
Keywords | |
Referendum, Constitution of the Republic of China, Three Principles of the People | |
Status: Amended |
The Taiwan Referendum Act ( Chinese: 公民投票法; pinyin: Gōngmín tóupiào fǎ; lit. 'Citizens' Voting Law') lays out the legal process and requirements for the direct-vote referendum process in Taiwan. Although the right of referendum was guaranteed in the Constitution of the Republic of China as early as 1946, the Constitution was suspended almost of the Constitution under martial law in Taiwan meant that there were no referendums in Taiwan until the passage of the Referendum Act.
Article 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of China guarantees "the people shall have the right of election, recall, initiative and referendum," [2] implementing " government by the People," one of the Three Principles of the People developed by Sun Yat-sen, founder of the Republic of China. The Constitution went into effect on December 25, 1947, but was effectively suspended under the 1948 " Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion" which established martial law in Taiwan until 1987.
Referendums may be initiated for a limited number of topics. [3]
National referendums may be initiated for the following topics of national importance:
Local referendums may be initiated for the following topics concerning local autonomy:
The following topics are excluded from the referendum process:
Once a suitable referendum has been identified and proposed, the process starts when a single leading proposer submits the following documents for review: [4]
The Review Commission has 10 days to examine the referendum documents, which involves having the list of proposers checked within 7 days by the government agencies of household registration and the Central Election Commission , and affected government agencies and the Legislative Yuan have one month to promulgate position papers. After the examination,
, which must be at least 5% of the total electors who voted in the latest election for President and Vice President
Every proposer (the leading proposer and all signatories on the list of proposers) for a referendum must:
In addition to the above qualifications, signers may be rejected from the list of qualified signatures for the following reasons: [7]
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cite report}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (
link)
| |
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![]() Seal of the Legislative Yuan | |
Legislative Yuan | |
| |
Citation | "Referendum Act". Laws & Regulations Database of The Republic of China. June 17, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2014. |
Territorial extent | Taiwan |
Passed | November 27, 2003 |
Commenced | December 31, 2003 |
Amended by | |
| |
Summary | |
Provides legal framework and process for citizens to exercise the constitutional right to referendum in the Republic of China. | |
Keywords | |
Referendum, Constitution of the Republic of China, Three Principles of the People | |
Status: Amended |
The Taiwan Referendum Act ( Chinese: 公民投票法; pinyin: Gōngmín tóupiào fǎ; lit. 'Citizens' Voting Law') lays out the legal process and requirements for the direct-vote referendum process in Taiwan. Although the right of referendum was guaranteed in the Constitution of the Republic of China as early as 1946, the Constitution was suspended almost of the Constitution under martial law in Taiwan meant that there were no referendums in Taiwan until the passage of the Referendum Act.
Article 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of China guarantees "the people shall have the right of election, recall, initiative and referendum," [2] implementing " government by the People," one of the Three Principles of the People developed by Sun Yat-sen, founder of the Republic of China. The Constitution went into effect on December 25, 1947, but was effectively suspended under the 1948 " Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion" which established martial law in Taiwan until 1987.
Referendums may be initiated for a limited number of topics. [3]
National referendums may be initiated for the following topics of national importance:
Local referendums may be initiated for the following topics concerning local autonomy:
The following topics are excluded from the referendum process:
Once a suitable referendum has been identified and proposed, the process starts when a single leading proposer submits the following documents for review: [4]
The Review Commission has 10 days to examine the referendum documents, which involves having the list of proposers checked within 7 days by the government agencies of household registration and the Central Election Commission , and affected government agencies and the Legislative Yuan have one month to promulgate position papers. After the examination,
, which must be at least 5% of the total electors who voted in the latest election for President and Vice President
Every proposer (the leading proposer and all signatories on the list of proposers) for a referendum must:
In addition to the above qualifications, signers may be rejected from the list of qualified signatures for the following reasons: [7]
{{
cite report}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (
link)