Constitution of the Republic of Chile | |
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Overview | |
Original title | Constitución Política de la República de Chile |
Jurisdiction | Territory of Chile |
Created | July of 1925 |
Ratified | August 30, 1925 |
Date effective | October of 1925 |
System | Presidentialism |
Head of state | President of the Republic |
Chambers | |
Executive | |
Judiciary | Supreme Court and the Public Ministry |
Electoral college | Election Certification Court |
History | |
Repealed | March 11, 1981 |
Amendments | 10 |
Last amended | 1971 |
Author(s) | José Maza Fernández and the Subcommittee on Reform |
Signatories | Arturo Alessandri and his cabinet |
Supersedes | Constitution of 1833 |
The Constitution of 1925 was the constitution in force in Chile between 1925 and 1973 when the Government Junta suspended it. In the 1920s Chile had a severe social and economic crisis that led to the loss of prestige for old ruling class, labeled oligarchy in Chilean historiography, and the rise of a more sensibilized populist government led by Arturo Alessandri. In 1924 Alessandri was outed in a coup, but was called back in 1925 to complete his mandate. Alessandri then used his presidency to draft a new constitution to replace the Constitution of 1833.
The constitution was approved by plebiscite by 134,421 voters on August 30 of 1925.[1] Prominent features of the constitution were: