The vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic of Peru by declaration of permanent moral incapacity is one of the cases of vacancy of the Head of State contemplated in article 113 of the Constitution of Peru, whose origin dates back to the Political Constitution of Peru of 1839. [1]
The process is different from an impeachment (contemplated in article 99 of the Constitution only for the offenses established in article 117), since it occurs from a declaration of the Congress of the Republic, which, if approved, creates a power vacuum, for which the legal succession proceeds. Said declaration of moral incapacity, regulated as Political Control in the Regulations of the Congress of the Republic, is considered by the Peruvian constitutional doctrine as a political trial sui generis . [2] More recently, the broad scope of the procedure has given the Congress of Peru power over the executive branch, allowing the legislature to remove the president without cause. [3] [4]
The declaration of the permanent moral incapacity of the President, corresponds to the Congress of the Republic, for which the following procedure established in the Regulations of the Congress:
The procedure for requesting a vacancy from the Presidency of the Republic, for the reasons set forth in subsection 2) of article 113 of the Constitution, is carried out in accordance with the following rules:
a) The vacancy request is formulated by means of a motion on the agenda, signed by no less than twenty percent of the legal number of Congressmen, specifying the factual and legal grounds on which it is based, as well as the documents that accredit it, or, failing that, the indication of the place where said documents are located. It takes precedence on the Agenda and is seen before any other pending motion on the agenda. Once the request is received, a copy of the same is sent, as soon as possible, to the President of the Republic.
b) For the admission of the vacancy request, the vote of at least forty percent of the able-bodied Congressmen is required. Voting is inevitably carried out in the session following the one in which the motion was made.
c) The Plenary of Congress agrees on the day and time for the debate and vote on the vacancy request, a session that cannot be held before the third day following the vote on the admission of the request or after the tenth, unless four-fifths of the number Congressmen agree to a shorter term debate and vote immediately. If necessary, a special session is summoned for this purpose. The President of the Republic whose vacancy is the subject of the request may personally exercise his right of defense or be assisted by a lawyer, for up to sixty minutes.
d) The agreement that declares the vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic, for the reasons set forth in subparagraph 2) of article 113 of the Constitution, requires a qualified vote of not less than 2/3 of the legal number of members of Congress and is recorded in a Resolution of Congress.
e) The resolution declaring the vacancy is published in the official gazette within twenty-four hours after receipt of the transmission sent by the Congress. Failing that, the President of Congress orders that it be published in one of the newspapers with the largest national circulation, without prejudice to the responsibilities that may arise.
f) The resolution declaring the vacancy is in effect from the moment the vacancy is communicated to the President of the Council of Ministers or its publication is made, whichever comes first.” [5]
It is worth mentioning that until 2004 there was no procedure that clearly established the mode of application of the corresponding constitutional article, which is why the Judgment of the Constitutional Court No. 0006-2003-AI/TC [6] established as criteria that the removal of the president of the republic should only be approved with a qualified vote of at least two thirds of the legal number of congressmen, urging Congress to legislate on the matter in order to fill the legal vacuum that existed until then. [7] In response to this, through Legislative Resolution of Congress No. 030-2003-CR, article 89-A was introduced into the Regulations of Congress.
Date | Picture | President | Result | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
June 23, 1823 | José de la Riva Agüero | Presidential Vacancy | In June, 38 of 69 deputies met, and with 27 votes in favor, the "exemption of the supreme command" was approved. It was alleged that the defeats suffered in the fighting in recent months showed that Riva Agüero was not fit to lead the country. | |
February 4, 1914 | Guillermo Billinghurst | Presidential Vacancy | From the end of 1913, Billinghurst planned the dissolution of Congress; In parallel, the parliamentarians agreed to declare the moral incapacity to govern the destinies of Peru in a manifesto to the nation. However, the coup d'état by Óscar Benavides removed Billinghurst from power, after which Congress published the manifesto declaring the vacancy and accepted the formation of a Governing Board. | |
April 9, 1992 | Alberto Fujimori | Presidential Vacancy not recognized by the Armed Forces. | After the self-coup of April 5, 1992, on April 9, 1992, the Congress unconstitutionally dissolved by Fujimori met at the home of the deputy from the Christian People's Party Lourdes Flores Nano (99 deputies and 36 senators) and declared the permanent moral incapacity of Alberto Fujimori and with it the vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic . [8] | |
November 21, 2000 | Alberto Fujimori | Presidential Vacancy | On September 14, 2000, a video was released showing Montesinos bribing members of other parties to support Fujimori. Two days later, and after the appearance of new videos, Alberto Fujimori called for parliamentary and presidential elections in which he would not participate. On November 19, Fujimori resigned from his post via fax from Japan. However, on November 21, Congress did not accept his resignation and proceeded to remove him due to moral incapacity. | |
December 21, 2017 | Pedro Pablo Kuczynski | The presidential vacancy was not declared | First impeachment of Pedro Pablo Kuczynski Suspicions of acts of corruption allegedly committed by Kuczynski when he was minister (2004-2006) | |
March 22, 2018 | Pedro Pablo Kuczynski | Before voting on the presidential vacancy, the president resigned | Second impeachment of Pedro Pablo Kuczynski After the Kenjivideos Scandal, President Kuczynski resigned from the Presidency of the Republic before the Congress proceeded with the vote on the presidential vacancy. [9] | |
September 18, 2020 | Martin Vizcarra | The presidential vacancy was not declared | First impeachment of Martín Vizcarra Having not told the truth and obstructed investigations in congressional and criminal courts. [10] | |
November 9, 2020 | Martin Vizcarra | Presidential Vacancy | Second impeachment and removal of Martín Vizcarra The motion argued that Vizcarra "had repeatedly and permanently lied the country" about alleged acts of corruption committed when he was regional Governor of the Department of Moquegua. [11] [12] | |
November 25, 2021 | Pedro Castillo | The admission to debate the presidential vacancy did not proceed | First impeachment of Pedro Castillo Due to the naming of doubtful people and being involved in acts of corruption, vacancy argues. [13] [14] | |
March 8, 2022 | Pedro Castillo | The presidential vacancy was not declared | Second impeachment of Pedro Castillo Due to the contradictions and alleged lies in court investigations, such as the alleged irregular promotions in the Armed Forces and the award of the Puente Tarata project to a company linked to the lobbyist Karelim López. [15] | |
December 7, 2022 | Pedro Castillo | Presidential Vacancy | Third impeachment of Pedro Castillo Due to the signs of corruption and the tax files that accuse him of being the leader of a criminal organization, influence peddling and collusion. [16] Additionally, just hours before Castillo was meant to go to the Congress for his defense, he illegally announced [17] the dissolution of Congress and other unconstitutional measures; action that caused Congress to vote in favor of the vacancy. Castillo was consequently arrested for attempting to break the constitutional order. [18] |
The Congress of the Republic of Peru is the unicameral body that assumes legislative power in Peru. Due to broadly interpreted impeachment wording in the Constitution of Peru, the President of Peru can be removed by Congress without cause, effectively making the legislature more powerful than the executive branch. Following a ruling in February 2023 by the Constitutional Court of Peru, the body tasked with interpreting the Constitution of Peru and whose members are directly chosen by Congress, judicial oversight of the legislative body was also removed by the court, essentially giving Congress absolute control of Peru's government. Since the 2021 Peruvian general election, right wing parties held a majority in the legislature. The largest represented leftist party in Congress, Free Peru, has subsequently aligned itself with conservative and Fujimorists parties within Congress due to their institutional power.
The Broad Front for Justice, Life and Liberty, or simply Broad Front, is a major political coalition of parties, political organizations, social movements and activist citizens of Peru whose main objective is to consolidate the different leftist, progressive, socialist and communist sectors.
Popular Force, known as Force 2011 until 2012, is a right-wing populist and Fujimorist political party in Peru. The party is led by Keiko Fujimori, former congresswoman and daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori. She ran unsuccessfully for the presidency in the 2011, 2016 and 2021 presidential elections, all losing by a narrow margin.
José Pedro Castillo Terrones is a Peruvian politician, former elementary school teacher, and union leader who served as the President of Peru from 28 July 2021 to 7 December 2022. Facing imminent impeachment proceedings, on 7 December 2022, Castillo attempted to dissolve Congress and rule by decree. In response, the Congress of the Republic of Peru impeached him, resulting in his removal from office.
Martín Alberto Vizcarra Cornejo is a Peruvian engineer and politician who served as President of Peru from 2018 to 2020. Vizcarra previously served as Governor of the Department of Moquegua (2011–2014), First Vice President of Peru (2016–2018), Minister of Transport and Communications of Peru (2016–2017), and Ambassador of Peru to Canada (2017–2018), with the latter three during the presidency of Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.
Since 2016, Peru has been plagued with political instability and a growing crisis, initially between the President, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and Congress, led de facto by Keiko Fujimori. The crisis emerged in late 2016 and early 2017 as the polarization of Peruvian politics increased, as well as a growing schism between the executive and legislative branches of government. Fujimori and her Fujimorist supporters would use their control of Congress to obstruct the executive branch of successive governments, resulting with a period of political instability in Peru.
Manuel Arturo Merino de Lama is a Peruvian politician who briefly served as President of Peru for six days between 10 and 15 November 2020. He also served as the President of Congress from 16 March 2020 to 15 November 2020. He was a Member of Congress (AP) representing the Tumbes constituency for the 2001–2006, 2011–2016, and 2020–2021 terms.
The impeachment process against Martín Vizcarra began in the Congress of Peru on 11 September 2020 when Congress initiated proceedings against Vizcarra on grounds of "moral incapacity", accusing him of influence peddling after audio recordings were released by an opposition legislator alleging that Vizcarra's political decisions were swayed by an obscure singer.
Together for Peru is a Peruvian centre-left to left-wing political coalition founded with the incumbent registration of the Peruvian Humanist Party.
The removal of Martín Vizcarra, president of Peru, was initiated by the Congress of Peru on 8 October 2020 under the grounds of "permanent moral incapacity". On 20 October 2020, political factions Union for Peru, Podemos Peru, and Frente Amplio co-signed a series of articles of impeachment against President Vizcarra for alleged cases of corruption during his term as the governor of Moquegua. Vizcarra was removed from office on 9 November 2020 in a 105–16 vote.
The 2020 Peruvian protests were a series of demonstrations sparked after the removal of President Martín Vizcarra that took place from 9 November to 17 November 2020.
Francisco Rafael Sagasti Hochhausler is a Peruvian engineer, academic, politician, and author who served as the President of Peru from November 2020 to July 2021.
Popular Renewal is a Peruvian conservative political party. Founded in 2020, the party is the successor of the former National Solidarity Party founded and led by former Lima Mayor Luis Castañeda Lossio. Following its poor results at the 2020 snap parliamentary election, leader Rafael López Aliaga announced the party's re-foundation under the Popular Renewal.
The presidency of Pedro Castillo began with his inauguration as the president of Peru on 28 July 2021, the Peruvian Independence Day. In the 2021 Peruvian general election, Castillo, a school teacher and union organizer, won the presidential election against the right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori of Popular Force by a 45,000 margin in the runoff. In the congressional elections, Castillo's party, Free Peru, did not get a majority in the Congress of the Republic of Peru.
Mass protests in Peru against inflation and President Pedro Castillo's government began in March 2022. The protests occurred amid rising fertilizer and fuel prices caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine and international sanctions imposed on Russia. Some of the larger protests were organized by Geovani Rafael Diez Villegas, the leader of the Union of Multimodal Transport Guilds of Peru (UGTRANM) who had previously collaborated in late 2021 with business executives and right-wing politicians, opposing the Castillo government and whose power is recognized as rivaling the government's own Ministry of Transport and Communications. Diez Villegas demanded the removal of passenger restrictions on buses, pardons for transportation workers who were charged with crimes, and negotiations for forgiving debt owed by transportation businessmen to the government. He later organized a general strike aimed at paralysing transportation in Peru beginning on 4 April 2022 that resulted in protests, product shortages, transportation stoppages and rioting.
On 7 December 2022, President of Peru Pedro Castillo attempted to dissolve Congress in the face of imminent impeachment proceedings by the legislative body, immediately enacting a curfew, attempted to establish an emergency government and rule by decree, and called for the formation of a constituent assembly, a violation of Article 206 of the Constitution of Peru. Attorney General Patricia Benavides, had previously claimed that Castillo was the head of a criminal organization and called on Congress to remove him from office, with legislators then attempting a third impeachment of Castillo. Citing the actions of Congress obstructing many of his policies during his administration, Castillo argued that the legislative body served oligopolic businesses and that it had allied itself with the Constitutional Court to destroy the executive branch in an effort to create a "dictatorship of Congress". He also called for the immediate election of a constituent assembly with some calls for the creation of a constituent assembly existing since the 2020 Peruvian protests.
Following the ousting of president of Peru, Pedro Castillo on 7 December 2022, a series of political protests against the government of president Dina Boluarte and the Congress of Peru occurred. The demonstrations lack centralized leadership and originated primarily among grassroots movements and social organizations on the left to far-left, as well as indigenous communities, who feel politically disenfranchised. Castillo was removed from office and arrested after announcing the dissolution of Congress, the intervention of the state apparatus, and the establishment of an "emergency government", which was characterized as a self-coup attempt by some media organizations and institutions in Peru while Castillo's supporters said that Congress attempted to overthrow Castillo. Castillo's successor Dina Boluarte, along with Congress, were widely disapproved, with the two receiving the lowest approval ratings among public offices in the Americas. Among the main demands of the demonstrators are the dissolution of Congress, the resignation of Boluarte, new general elections, the release of Castillo, and the formation of a constituent assembly to draft a new constitution. It has also been reported that some of the protesters have declared an insurgency. Analysts, businesses, and voters said that immediate elections are necessary to prevent future unrest, although many establishment political parties have little public support.
The third presidential vacancy (impeachment) process against President Pedro Castillo was an action initiated by the Congress of the Republic of Peru with the purpose of declaring the "permanent moral incapacity" of the President of the Republic, Pedro Castillo, under Article 113 of the Political Constitution of Peru.
George Edward Málaga Trillo is a Peruvian musician, neurobiologist and politician. He was elected congressman of the Republic of Peru for Lima for the 2021-2026 parliamentary period with the Purple Party. He is considered non-grouped in the absence of two members to form a party caucus.