The Place of the Parliament and Deputies in the System of Correlation of Subjects of Constitutional Law

Stanislav A. Vasiliev
Year: 2022
UDK: 342.53
Pages: 54-59
Language: russian
Section: LAW
Keywords: parliament, parliamentarism, branches of powers, Government, interaction, relation theory, subjects of constitutional law, constitutional responsibility, representation, multinational people
Abstract
The current constitutional and legal regulation poses the Russian parliament as an important and significant subject of public relations. The amendments to the domestic act of the highest legal force of 2020 are believed to have strengthened the position of the federal representative body. However, practice shows the opposite situation, when more frequent social upheavals, including the pandemic of a new coronavirus infection, the variety of consequences of a special military operation in Ukraine, require prompt decisions that exclude in-depth elaboration and lengthy discussions. Nevertheless, the highest constitutional values demand the true and objective expression of the will of the multinational population of the Russian Federation through those institutions that are enshrined in the Constitution. The author has analyzed the relationship between the representative and executive federal authorities in terms of their effectiveness and proposed separate tools for increasing the efficiency of the parliament. The implementation of the formulated proposals can, without significant restrictions, increase the legitimacy of the current government, democratize modern society, increase public confidence in the current government, and optimize the interaction between the branches of Russian power. This study was carried out on the basis of the author’s theory of correlation of subjects of constitutional law aimed at understanding the essence of the mutual influence of actors on each other in the field of public administration. Separate positions of famous scientists are also considered to substantiate the author’s position. Conclusions are made using general philosophical and particular scientific methods of cognition. The author partially exploited the historical method.
License: