The Invisible Constitution in Comparative Perspective



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The Invisible Constitution in Comparative Perspective by Rosalind Dixon (editor), Adrienne Stone (editor) (z-lib.org)

Fundamental Law (Budapest; New York, NY:  Central European University Press,  2012), 

 

237–68.



59 

F. Zakaria, “The rise of Illiberal Democracy” (1997) 76 Foreign Affairs 22.

60 

G. A. Tóth, “Authoritarianism,” in R. Grote, F. Lachenmann, R. Wolfrum (eds.) Max Planck 



Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).

61 


OSCE/ODIHR Limited Election Observation Mission Final Report, Hungary Parliamentary 

Elections April 6, 2014, Warsaw, July 11, 2014.




 

Lost in Transition 

561


Distinctively, the text of the Fundamental Law does not call itself a “con-

stitution,” rather lending this word to the “historical constitution” only. The 

Preamble of the text, called “National Avowal” states that:

We honor the achievements of our historical constitution and we honor the 

Holy Crown, which embodies the constitutional continuity of Hungary’s 

statehood and the unity of the nation. We do not recognize the suspension of 

our historical constitution due to foreign occupations.

The Fundamental Law also lays down as a principle that its provisions shall be 

interpreted in accordance with, inter alia, the achievements of the historical 

constitution. Since there is no clear definition what the “achievements of the 

historical constitution” are, this concept, used both in the National Avowal 

and in Article R, brings a certain vagueness into constitutional interpretation. 

The Venice Commission characterized this as a “lack of clarity and consist-

ency” among the elements of principles of constitutional interpretation.

62

The Fundamental Law suggests that the historical constitution is coupled 



with the Holy Crown. The holy crown doctrine was introduced by the scholar 

and theologian István Werbo˝czy, who retrospectively codified it in his work 



Tripartitum (1517), which was a de facto law-book until 1848. According to his 

teaching, the king and the equal noblemen were somehow united in the holy 

crown. Thus, the holy crown was the symbol of the community of nobles. 

During the nineteenth century the holy crown doctrine served as a protector 

of the Throne and the Altar, thus becoming a targeted notion by reformists and 

revolutionaries. Late nineteenth-century legal historicism breathed new life 

into the doctrine. What law historians declared to be an ancient Hungarian idea 

was mostly their intellectual creation: a romantic, nationalist, self-defensive  

ideology of the noblemen. In addition, the holy crown doctrine allowed for 

“a kingdom without a king,” which legitimized governor Miklós Horthy’s 

authoritarian regime between 1920 and 1944. This period added revisionist 

significance to the crown, after the Trianon peace treaty reduced the territory 

of Hungary to one-third of what it was previously. Consequently, the holy 

crown doctrine prefers a mystic “membership” of the ancient territory of the 

Hungarian Kingdom to the current borders of the state, and noble privileges 

to the republican traditions of 1946 and 1989.

The nation, the very subject of the constitution, is identified in the Preamble 

as an “intellectual and spiritual” community. The text insists that there is 

“one single Hungarian nation that belongs together,” a nation including all 

62 


Venice Commission, Opinion No. 621/2011, [28].


562 

Gábor Attila Tóth

ethnic Hungarians regardless of their habitual residence and effective link to 

the state. At the same time, those resident Hungarian citizens who belong to 

national minorities are not included in the category of nation. This concept of 

the nation diverges from those European constitutional standards that admit 

that modern nation states are multiethnic societies, and thus require the iden-

tification of people with citizens as subjects of the same legal system.

According to the Preamble, the country was, on the one hand, a hero fight-

ing in the defense of Europe over the centuries. On the other hand, the coun-

try was a victim of the occupying German and Soviet forces during and after 

the Second World War. Nevertheless, the text does not mention the republi-

can traditions or look back on the tragic failures of the nation. In the sense of 

the Preamble, 1989 was a beginning of confusion, and the real revolutionary 

year was 2010, because of the results of the parliamentary elections. What can 

be read in the text is, as Adam Michnik would put it, that historical narratives 

are replaced by myths, ideological agendas, and a sense of victimization.

63

As opposed to the invisible constitution doctrine, the Fundamental Law 



refers explicitly to religious foundations. The Preamble reads as follows: “We 

are proud that one thousand years ago, our King Saint Stephen established 

the Hungarian State on solid foundations, and led our country to become part 

of Christian Europe” and “we acknowledge the nation-preserving role of the 

Christian faith.” It is noteworthy that the declaration does not simply remem-

ber the historical role of Christianity in founding the state, but expresses 

that the constitutionalism present is based upon traditional Christian faith. 

Consequently, it identifies itself with the moral and political foundations of 

a certain faith, in spite of the fact that Hungarian citizens, like other political 

communities in Europe, are divided by ethical and religious disagreements.

In conformity with the premise that the new system is authoritarian, we 

can also say that the Court, as the highest interpreting authority, plays a legit-

imizing role instead of fulfilling the task of final guardian of fundamental 

rights. Decisions of the constitutional justices, elected according to the will of 

the authoritarian leader, contribute to the reinforcement of the regime. Here 

Hungary follows Russia, where the altered but not abolished court serves as a 

tool of authoritarian imposition.

I think much scholarly research is still needed to understand better the 

Hungarian case – and similar systems – where not only the Constitution has 

become invisible, but also the Constitutional Court and the constitutional 

justice in total.

63 


A. Michnik, in Irena Grudzinska Gross (ed.) The Trouble with History: Morality, Revolution, 


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