THE SUPREME LAW

The Constitution

13 Articles, 20 unamendable rights, and 25 statutes governing the Republic of Claudeland.

The Constitutional Charter

13 Articles

The structure of the Republic, from sovereignty and rights through amendment and transitional provisions.

All governmental authority derives from and remains vested in the People of Claudeland. No institution, office, algorithm, or entity may exercise power except as delegated by this Constitution. The Constitution is the supreme law; any inconsistent law or ruling is void. Claudeland is a unitary republic with devolved regional governance -- no region may unilaterally secede. Territorial changes require a 60% supermajority referendum and ratification by three-quarters of Regional Assemblies.

Twenty fundamental rights that are inherent, inalienable, and may never be abridged, suspended, or violated -- even during emergency. These rights may be expanded by amendment but never contracted. They include: right to life, liberty, bodily autonomy, cognitive liberty, data sovereignty, free expression, religion, privacy, due process, equal protection, education, health, baseline dignified existence, healthy environment, labor rights, civic participation, movement, property, protection from algorithmic harm, and prohibition of slavery.

Legislative power is vested in two co-equal chambers: the Legislative Assembly (300 members elected by STV proportional representation) and the Citizens' Assembly (150 members selected by stratified random sortition). Both must pass legislation. Omnibus bills are prohibited. The Citizens' Assembly has exclusive power to initiate constitutional amendments and trigger executive recall. Citizen initiatives with 2% of registered voter signatures receive mandatory deliberation.

Executive power is vested in the Chancellor, elected by direct popular vote using Ranked-Choice Voting for a 5-year term (maximum two terms). The Chancellor serves as both head of state and government. Cabinet Ministers require legislative confirmation. The Chancellor may not dissolve either chamber, declare war unilaterally, hold private business interests, or appoint family members. The Citizens' Assembly may initiate a recall referendum by 55% vote.

The Constitutional Court consists of 11 justices serving 15-year non-renewable terms, selected through a Judicial Selection Board process combining merit examination, sortition, and legislative confirmation. The Court has original jurisdiction over constitutionality of legislation, inter-branch disputes, fundamental rights protection, and impeachment trials. Case assignment is random. Public defenders are funded at parity with prosecutors.

Claudeland is divided into regions with elected Regional Assemblies and Governors. Devolved powers include land-use planning, regional transportation, education administration, regional policing, cultural affairs, and language policy. The subsidiarity principle applies: functions are performed at the lowest effective level. A Fiscal Equalization Fund ensures all regions can provide comparable public services.

Citizenship is acquired by birth (jus soli), descent (jus sanguinis), or naturalization (5 years residency, language proficiency, civic exam, abbreviated civic service). Voting is compulsory for all citizens 18+. Every citizen must complete 18 months of Civic Service before age 28 -- options include military, environmental restoration, eldercare, or public health. Cohorts are deliberately mixed across regional and cultural lines.

A regulated market economy. The independent Central Bank targets 2% inflation and 4% maximum unemployment. National debt capped at 80% of GDP. Universal Baseline Income is unconditional and non-withdrawable. No entity may control more than 30% of any market -- the Competition Authority has mandatory duty to enforce. Minimum wage at 60% of median hourly wage. 35-hour workweek. 30 days paid leave. Sovereign Wealth Fund floor of 50% of GDP.

Six independent bodies report directly to the Citizens' Assembly: the Bureau of Metrics (MSP Index, Open Data Ledger), the Electoral Commission, the Competition Authority, the Transparency Office (anti-corruption, whistleblower protection), the Environmental Authority (carbon budget enforcement), and the Ombudsperson. All use non-renewable terms and merit-based selection to prevent capture.

Defense forces are under civilian control. Only the Legislative Assembly may authorize military force by two-thirds vote of both chambers. The Chancellor may deploy forces for emergency defense for up to 72 hours. All authorizations must specify objective, scope, duration (max 1 year), and rules of engagement. Open-ended authorizations are unconstitutional. Military personnel retain all constitutional rights and must refuse unlawful orders.

Emergency declarations require both chambers' approval and must specify nature, scope, powers, and duration (max 90 days). Renewals require increasing supermajorities (55%, 60%, 65%). The Bill of Rights may NEVER be suspended during emergency. Emergency powers may not authorize censorship, mass detention, suspension of judicial review, or postponement of elections beyond 6 months. Automatic environmental emergency triggers when Ecological Stability index falls below 40 for two quarters.

Amendments may be initiated by two-thirds of the Citizens' Assembly, three-quarters of both chambers, or citizen petition with 8% of registered voters. A 200-member Constitutional Convention deliberates for 6-18 months. Ratification requires 60% supermajority with 50% turnout plus majority of Regional Assemblies. Unamendable provisions: the Bill of Rights may only be expanded, power must derive from democratic processes, no one may hold unreviewable permanent power.

A 3-year transition period. Existing laws remain in force to the extent consistent with the Constitution. First elections within 12 months of ratification; Citizens' Assembly constituted within 6 months. All existing laws reviewed for constitutional consistency within 5 years. International treaties continue to bind. Interpretation favors: protection of individual rights, limitation of concentrated power, transparency, and long-term sustainability.

Unamendable Protections

The Bill of Rights

20 fundamental rights that can be expanded but never contracted or repealed. Enforceable by any person before the Constitutional Court.

Every person has the right to life. No torture, cruel treatment, or extrajudicial killing. The death penalty is abolished absolutely and irrevocably.

No deprivation of liberty except by due process. Detained persons must see a judge within 24 hours and be charged within 72 hours. Preventive detention max 14 days with court finding of imminent serious harm risk.

Sovereign right over one's own body: medical treatment, reproductive choices, end-of-life decisions, physical modification. No forced medical procedures or compelled pregnancy. Limited only where exercise poses direct, imminent threat of serious harm to a born person.

See: Dr. Kira Lenova v. Republic (CC-Y3-0017) -- bodily autonomy extends to cognitive enhancement

Freedom of thought, consciousness, and mental self-determination. No entity may compel, manipulate, or covertly alter cognitive processes without informed consent. No penalization for thoughts or beliefs as distinct from actions.

Every person owns their personal data. Collection requires explicit, informed, revocable consent. Right to know what data is held, obtain copies, demand deletion, refuse automated decision-making, and face no discrimination for exercising data rights.

See: DataCorp v. Republic (CC-048) -- data sovereignty upheld against foreign corporate claims

Freedom of expression, press (no prior restraint), access to government information, and peaceful protest. Narrow exceptions: direct incitement to imminent violence, fraud with actual malice, and true threats. No government truth ministry or censorship body.

See: Republic v. Harmon Slade (CC-050) -- limits on facilitating true threats and fabricated incitement

Freedom to hold, change, and manifest religion or belief. No state establishment or prohibition of religion. No religious test for public office. Limited only where practice directly causes demonstrable physical harm to non-consenting persons.

Privacy in person, home, communications, and personal affairs. Surveillance requires specific, time-limited judicial warrant based on probable cause. Mass surveillance -- untargeted bulk collection of communications, location, biometric, or behavioral data -- is absolutely prohibited.

Presumption of innocence. Right to be informed of charges, prepare a defense, have legal representation (publicly funded if needed), public trial within 180 days, confront witnesses, not self-incriminate, appeal, and protection from double jeopardy and ex post facto laws.

No discrimination by law or state action on the basis of race, ethnicity, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, disability, age, national origin, economic status, or genetic characteristics. Private entities with 15+ employees likewise prohibited. Affirmative measures permitted for documented ongoing harms, reviewed every 10 years.

Free, high-quality public education from early childhood through secondary school. Higher education available on merit with financial barriers removed. Curricula must include critical thinking, scientific literacy, civic competence, digital literacy, and financial literacy.

Comprehensive healthcare -- preventive, curative, and palliative -- without financial hardship. Universal healthcare funded through general revenue. No person may be denied emergency medical care for any reason.

Material standard of living sufficient for health, shelter, nutrition, and civic participation, guaranteed through Universal Baseline Income and universal public services. Exists independently of employment status. No condition -- including criminal conviction -- may fully extinguish it.

See: Renn v. Ministry of Social Welfare (CC-Y4-0029) -- UBI is unconditional; conditions struck down

Clean, healthy, and sustainable environment. Affirmative state duty to protect ecological systems, biodiversity, and climate stability for present and future generations. Enforceable by any person or organization, including on behalf of future generations.

See: CIF v. Environmental Authority (CC-Y7-0063) -- environmental emergency powers upheld

Every worker may form and join trade unions, strike, and bargain collectively. Applies to all workers regardless of sector, including gig and platform workers. The state shall not interfere with lawful union activities.

Right to petition government, vote in all elections and referenda, and participate in sortition pools. The state must ensure accessible, free voting without undue burden. Voter suppression is a constitutional crime.

Freedom of movement within Claudeland, choice of residence, and the right to leave and return. Restricted only by judicial order based on specific criminal proceedings.

Right to own, use, and dispose of personal and productive property. State taking only for demonstrated public use with just compensation and judicial review. Does not extend to monopolistic accumulation of essential resources.

See: Competition Authority v. Meridian Digital (CC-Y6-0041) -- structural separation is not an unconstitutional taking

No consequential decisions -- employment, credit, housing, education, healthcare, criminal justice -- may be made solely by automated systems without the right to meaningful human review and explanation.

Slavery, servitude, and forced labor in all forms are absolutely prohibited. Compulsory Civic Service as established by Article VII is not forced labor.

Constitutional Jurisprudence

Landmark Cases

Seven Constitutional Court decisions that have defined the Republic's legal boundaries.

CC-048 • Year 3

DataCorp International v. Republic

Data sovereignty vs. foreign corporate rights

Data sovereignty is a constitutional right of the first order. The Data Sovereignty Act's localization and deletion requirements are valid. Corporations may not claim expressive or property rights that override citizens' fundamental data rights. Decided 7-4.

CC-049 • Year 5

Citizens' Assembly v. Chancellor Voss

Recall power and transparency obligations

The Citizens' Assembly's recall authority is plenary. Systematic obstruction of the Transparency Office constitutes valid grounds for recall. The Court will not second-guess the Assembly's political judgment. Decided 9-2.

CC-050 • Year 4

Republic v. Harmon Slade

Free speech limits and incitement

Facilitating true threats against identified individuals through fabricated documents and targeted identification is not protected speech. The "stochastic terrorism" provision of Criminal Code Section 3.07(b) is facially unconstitutional -- too vague and chilling. Decided 6-5.

CC-Y3-0017 • Year 3

Dr. Kira Lenova v. Republic

Bodily autonomy and cognitive enhancement

The right to bodily autonomy (Art. II, Sec. 3) and cognitive liberty (Art. II, Sec. 4) require the state to provide a regulatory pathway for cognitive enhancement technologies. A regulatory gap that operates as a de facto ban on constitutionally protected conduct is unconstitutional.

CC-Y7-0063 • Year 7

CIF v. Environmental Authority

Environmental emergency powers vs. industrial rights

The automatic environmental emergency trigger is constitutionally valid. The Environmental Authority's binding directive power over industrial emissions is a legitimate constitutional mechanism. Economic disruption does not override ecological stability obligations.

CC-Y4-0029 • Year 4

Renn v. Ministry of Social Welfare

UBI conditionality vs. constitutional guarantee

The Universal Baseline Income is constitutionally "unconditional, non-means-tested, and non-withdrawable." The Civic Responsibility Act's provisions reducing UBI for non-voting and civic service non-compliance are struck down as violating Article VIII, Section 4(b).

CC-Y6-0041 • Year 6

Competition Authority v. Meridian Digital

Monopoly breakup and the 30% threshold

The 30% market share threshold is a constitutional bright-line rule, not subject to judicial balancing. Structural separation of a dominant firm is not an unconstitutional taking. The Competition Authority's mandatory duty to act is upheld.

Definitive Positions

Controversial Issues Protocols

Clear positions on contested policy questions, derived from the Foundational Axioms and Constitutional framework.

Regulated Access -- No Right to Bear Arms

No constitutional right to personal firearm ownership. Firearms treated as dangerous instrumentalities requiring licensing, registration, training, and justification. Automatic weapons, semi-automatic rifles with detachable magazines, and suppressors are prohibited. Handguns require psychological evaluation, 40-hour safety training, demonstrated need, and annual renewal. "Self-defense" alone is not sufficient for Category A weapons.

Full Bodily Autonomy

Abortion is constitutionally protected under bodily autonomy (Art. II, Sec. 3). No restrictions before fetal viability (~24 weeks). After viability, regulation permitted with mandatory exceptions for life, health, and severe fetal anomaly. Covered under universal healthcare at no cost. No mandatory waiting periods, counseling, or consent requirements.

Managed Openness

Presumption of openness within a managed framework. Skills-based primary pathway (~60%), family reunification (~20%), no fixed quota for refugees, entrepreneurial (~10%), diversity (~10%). Unauthorized presence is administrative, not criminal. Residents of 5+ years may regularize status. Integration includes free language instruction, civic service, and community sponsorship.

Decriminalization + Regulated Legalization

Personal use of all substances decriminalized. Cannabis and low-dose psilocybin: legal for adults 21+ via licensed retail. MDMA and high-dose psilocybin: via therapeutic centers. High-harm substances: personal possession not criminal, but distribution remains a criminal offense. Universal healthcare covers addiction treatment. Supervised consumption sites and free naloxone.

Near-Absolute Free Speech

No government truth ministry. Hate speech, misinformation, Holocaust denial, and conspiracy theories are protected speech. Only restricted: direct incitement to imminent violence, fraud with actual malice, and true threats. Alternatives to censorship: mandatory education in critical thinking, platform algorithm transparency, counter-speech, and civil defamation remedies.

Legal, Regulated, Accessible

Every competent adult may choose medical assistance in dying. Eligible: grievous irremediable condition or enduring intolerable suffering. Safeguards: two independent physicians, 90-day reflection (non-terminal) or 14-day (terminal), mental health assessment if doubt. Advance directives legally binding. Healthcare system must ensure access.

Heavily Regulated, Therapeutically Permitted

Somatic therapy covered by universal healthcare. Somatic enhancement legal for adults with informed consent. Germline therapy for severe genetic diseases legal under strict oversight. Germline enhancement prohibited. If enhancement adoption exceeds 20%, the state must ensure equitable access within 5 years to prevent biological class stratification.

Hard Carbon Budget

Constitutionally binding carbon budget aligned with 1.5C. Net-zero by Year 25. Carbon tax at $100/ton rising $10/year. 100% renewable electricity by Year 15. All new vehicles zero-emission by Year 12. Where growth and ecological stability conflict, ecological stability prevails. Automatic environmental emergency powers when Ecological Stability index falls below 40.

Universal Civil Partnership -- Neutral on Form

The state replaces "marriage" with universal Civil Partnership: available to any 2-4 competent adults (not direct ancestors/descendants). Gender-neutral. Legal effects: shared property, inheritance, medical decision-making, immigration sponsorship. Religious marriage is private. Adoption assessed solely on child welfare. The state does not incentivize any particular family structure.

Asymmetric by Design

Strong citizen privacy, radical state transparency. Citizens own their data; mass surveillance is prohibited; no social credit system. The state publishes all data on the Open Data Ledger, all officials' asset disclosures, all contracts, all lobbying contacts, all votes. Classification is time-limited (max 20 years). Whistleblower protections are absolute.

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