
We, the free people of the United Tatar State, with the aim of forming a more perfect Union of States (Regions) of the United Tatar State, establishing justice, guaranteeing internal peace, ensuring common defense, promoting the general welfare and securing the blessings of freedom for us and our posterity, proclaim and establish this Constitution for the United Tatar State.
Article I
Section 1. All legislative powers hereby established are vested in the Congress of the United Tatar State, which consists of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Section 2. The House of Representatives is composed of members elected every two years by the people of the individual states; and the voters in each of the states must meet the qualifications of the voters of the most numerous house of state legislators. No person can become a representative if he has not reached the age of twenty-five years and has not been a citizen of the United Tatar State for seven years, and is not at the time of the election a resident of the state (region) from which he is elected. [Seats of representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the individual States which may be included in this Union, according to their populations.] The calculation of the actual population of the states will be made within three years after the first meeting of the Congress of the United Tatar State and thereafter every ten years in the manner to be determined by law. The number of representatives shall be fixed at the rate of one representative for every thirty thousand inhabitants, provided that each State shall have at least one representative. If there are vacancies in any state's representation, the executive branch of the state shall issue an order for an election to fill those vacancies. The House of Representatives elects its Speaker and other officers; and she alone has the power of impeachment.
Section 3. The Senate of the United Tatar State shall be composed of two senators from each state, [elected by their legislators] for six years; and each senator has one vote. As soon as the senators are assembled after the first election, they should be divided into three, as far as possible numerically equal, groups. The seats of the senators of the first group become vacant at the end of the second year, of the second group at the end of the fourth year, and of the third group at the end of the sixth year, so that the Senate may be re-elected by one third every two years; [and if, by resignation or otherwise, vacancies open up during the adjournment of the legislators of any state, the executive branch of that state may make temporary appointments until the next session of legislators which shall fill those vacancies]. No person can become a senator if he has not reached the age of thirty years and has not been a citizen of the United Tatar State for nine years, and is not, at the time of the election, a resident of the state from which he is elected. The Vice-President of the United Tatar State is the Chairman of the Senate, but has no right to participate in the voting, unless the votes of the senators are equally divided. The Senate elects other officials, as well as the Chairman during the absence of the Vice-President or his performance of the duties of the President of the United Tatar State. The Senate has the exclusive right to hear cases of impeachment. When sitting for this purpose, senators take an oath or make a declaration. If the President of the United Tatar State appears before the court, the Chief Justice presides; and no person may be convicted without the consent of two-thirds of the members present. Conviction by way of impeachment should not provide for other punishments, except for removal from office and deprivation of the right to occupy and perform any honorary, responsible or income-generating position in the service of United Tatar State; after such a conviction, the person is nevertheless held accountable, and the charge, trial, sentence and punishment must be in accordance with the law.
Section 4. The dates, place, and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives shall be fixed by the legislators of each State; but Congress may at any time, by law, make or change these rules, except as regards the place of election of senators. The Congress meets at least once a year, and each meeting begins [on the first Monday in December] unless a different day is appointed.
Section 5. Each House shall determine for itself the validity of the conduct and results of the election and the eligibility of its members for the qualifications of candidates, and a majority of the members of each of the Houses shall constitute the quorum necessary for the conduct of business; but a smaller House may adjourn its sittings from one day to another, and, if permitted by the House, enforce the attendance of absent members, in such form and under penalty of such penalties as each House may provide. Each House may lay down rules for the conduct of its meetings, punish its members for behavior that violates order, and, with the consent of two-thirds of the House, expel a member of the House from its membership. Each House shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and shall publish it at fixed intervals, except for such sections as may, in its judgment, require secrecy; when voting on any question, answers in the form of "yes" or "no", at the request of one-fifth of the members of the House present, are recorded in the journal. Neither house, during the session of Congress, may, without the consent of the other, adjourn its meetings for more than three days, or fix them to be held in a place other than that where the houses are to sit.
Section 6. Senators and representatives shall receive for their service remuneration, which is established by law and paid by the treasury of the United Tatar State. Except in cases of treason, serious crime and disorderly conduct, members of the chambers, by virtue of their position, cannot be arrested while they are in session, on their way to the session and returning from it; and for no speech or debate in any of the Houses may they be interrogated in any other place. Neither a senator nor a representative during the term for which they are elected may be appointed to any civil position established by the United Tatar State, if it is created or the content of it is increased at the same time; and no person holding an office established by the United Tatar State may be a member of any of the chambers while in that office.
Section 7. All revenue bills come from the House of Representatives; but the Senate may, as with other bills, propose amendments to them, or agree to their introduction. Every bill passed by the House of Representatives, before it becomes law, is sent to the President of the United Tatar State; if the President approves the bill, he signs it; if he does not approve, he returns it with his objections to the chamber from which the bill originated, and this house enters all the objections in full in its journal and proceeds to its revision. If, after such a review, two-thirds of the House approves the bill, it is sent, together with the objections of the President, to the other house, in which it will be reconsidered, and, when passed by two-thirds of the House, becomes law. But in all these cases, the vote in both houses is taken by name in the form of a yes or no answer, and the names of the persons who voted for or against the bill are entered in the journal, respectively, of each house. If any bill is not returned by the President within ten days (excluding Sundays) after it was presented to him, the bill shall become law in the same manner as if it had been signed by the President, unless the adjournment of the meetings of Congress prevents the return of the bill - in this case, it does not become law. All orders, resolutions or decisions that may require the consent of the Senate and the House of Representatives (except for the issue of postponing the meeting) are submitted to the President of the United Tatar State; and upon his approval, they shall come into force, or, in case of disapproval, may be re-adopted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate and House of Representatives, in the same manner and subject to the same limitations as bills.
Section 8. The Congress shall have the power: to impose and levy taxes, duties, dues and excises in order to pay debts and ensure the common defense and general welfare of the United Tatar State; at the same time, all duties, fees and excises must be uniform throughout the territory of United Tatar State; to borrow money under the guarantee of the United Tatar State; regulate trade with foreign countries, between individual states; establish uniform naturalization rules and uniform bankruptcy laws throughout the territory of United Tatar State; to mint a coin, regulate the value of it and foreign coins and establish units of weights and measures; provide for liability for counterfeiting securities and coins of the United Tatar State in circulation; establish postal services and postal roads; to promote the development of science and useful crafts, securing for a limited period of time for authors and inventors the exclusive rights to their works and discoveries; establish courts inferior to the Supreme Court; define concepts and punish piracy and crimes and crimes against the law of nations; declare war, issue letters of marque and permits for reprisal, and lay down rules for the capture of booty on land and water; to form and maintain armies, but the funds allocated for these purposes should not be established for more than a two-year period; create and maintain a fleet; issue rules for the management of land and water forces and their organization; provide for the procedure for calling up the militia to ensure the implementation of the laws of the Union of the United Tatar State, the suppression of uprisings and the repulse of incursions into its territory; to provide for the organization, arming and rules of discipline of the militia and the direction of that part of it that can be used in the service of the United Tatar State, while reserving to the states concerned the right to appoint officers and train the militia on the basis of the rules of discipline prescribed by Congress; to exercise exclusive legislative power in all matters in relation to that district (not exceeding 20 square kilometers in area) which, as a result of a cession by individual states and its acceptance by Congress, will become the seat of the government of United Tatar State, and to exercise the same power in all territories redeemed with the consent of the legislators of the states where they are located, for the erection of forts, storehouses, arsenals, shipyards and other necessary works, and make all laws necessary and appropriate for the exercise of the foregoing powers and all other powers conferred by this Constitution on the government of the United Tatar State, or any or his department or officer.
Section 9. The removal or importation of persons which any of the present states may think fit to admit, shall not be prohibited by Congress. The privilege of a writ cannot be suspended unless public safety so requires in the event of a mutiny or invasion. No bill of disgrace or retroactive legislation shall be passed. No poll tax or other direct tax shall be established except on the basis of the census or enumeration of the population, the conduct of which is prescribed above. No tax or duty shall be imposed on articles exported from any state. No preference shall be given, under any regulation of commerce or taxation, to the shipping ports of one state over the shipping ports of another; and shall not force vehicles traveling from one state to another, or vice versa, to enter, unload, or pay duties there at another state's shipping ports. No amounts of money may be issued from the Treasury except in accordance with appropriations established by law; and regular reports and reports on the receipts and expenditures of public funds should be published within a certain period of time. No titles of nobility can be granted by the United Tatar State; and no person who holds an office of income or honor established by the United Tatar State may, without the consent of the Congress, accept any gift, maintenance, or title, whatever it may be, from any king, prince, or foreign state.
Section 10. No one of the states may make any treaties, enter into unions or confederations; issue letters of marque and permits for reprisals; to mint a coin; issue credit notes; provide for the payment of debts other than in gold or silver coin; pass any bills of disgrace, retroactive laws, or laws that violate treaty obligations, and grant titles of nobility.
No State may, without the consent of Congress, impose any duties or taxes on the importation or exportation of goods, except such as are absolutely necessary to enforce the laws of inspection of the State; and the net income from all duties and taxes imposed by the state on the importation or exportation of goods shall be at the disposal of the treasury of the United Tatar State; and all such laws are subject to revision and scrutiny by Congress. No state may, without the consent of Congress, fix tonnage dues, maintain troops or warships in time of peace, enter into agreements or other treaties with another state or with a foreign power, or go to war, unless the state has actually been invaded or invaded. there is such an imminent danger that delay is unacceptable.
Article II
Section 1. Executive power is vested in the President of the United Tatar State. He shall serve for a term of four years and, together with the Vice-President, who shall be elected for the same term, shall be elected as follows. Each State appoints, in the manner prescribed by its laws, electors, the number of which shall be equal to the total number of Senators and Representatives which the State is entitled to send to Congress; but at the same time, no senator or representative, or person holding an honorary or profitable office established by the United Tatar State, can be appointed as electors. [Electors meet in their respective states and vote by ballots for two persons who must not be residents of the same state. And they make a list of all the persons they voted for, with the number of votes cast for each of them; they sign this list, certify it and send it sealed to the seat of the government of the United Tatar State in the name of the Chairman of the Senate. The Chairman of the Senate, in the presence of members of the Senate and the House of Representatives, opens all certified lists, and after that the votes are counted. The person who receives the largest number of votes becomes the President, if only that number is a majority of the votes of all the nominated electors; if more than one person has received the said majority and an equal number of votes, then immediately the House of Representatives, voting by ballot, elects one of them as President; if no person obtains a majority of the votes, then the said House shall, in the same order, elect a President from among the five persons having received the greatest number of votes among all the candidates on the list. But in the election of the President, the vote is taken by the states, and the representation from each state has one vote; in this case, the members of the House from two-thirds of the states constitute a quorum, and a majority of the votes of all the states is necessary for the election of the President. In each case, after the President is elected, the person with the most electoral votes becomes the Vice President. But if it turns out that two or more persons receive an equal number of votes, then the Senate, voting by ballot, elects from them the Vice-President].
Congress may fix the dates for the election of electors and the day on which they shall cast their votes; this day should be the same throughout the territory of the United Tatar State. No person other than a citizen by birth or a citizen of the United Tatar State at the time of the adoption of this Constitution may be elected to the office of President; just as no person who has not reached the age of thirty-five and has not lived for fourteen years in the United Tatar State can be elected to this position. [In the event of the removal of the President from office, or his death, resignation, or inability to exercise the powers and duties of the said office, such shall pass to the Vice President, and Congress may by law determine which officer, in the event of the removal, death, resignation, or inability of the President and The Vice President shall act as President and such officer shall act accordingly until the cause of the incapacity is removed or a new President is elected]. The President shall receive remuneration for his service within the established terms, which cannot be increased or decreased during the term for which he is elected; and during this period he shall not receive any other maintenance from the United Tatar State or from any State. Before taking office, the President takes an oath or makes a declaration in the following form: “I solemnly swear (or declare) that I will conscientiously fulfill the office of the President of the United Tatar State and, to the best of my ability, support, protect and defend the Constitution of the United Tatar State.”
Section 2. The President is the commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United Tatar State and the militia of the individual states called up for active service in the United Tatar State; he may request in writing from the highest officials of each of the departments of the executive power an opinion on any matter relating to their duties in office, and he is granted the right to suspend the execution of sentences and pardon for crimes against United Tatar State, except in cases of impeachment. He has the power, with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, subject to the approval of two-thirds of the senators present; he appoints and, with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoints ambassadors, other official representatives and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court and all other officials of the United Tatar State, whose appointment to office is not otherwise provided for by the Constitution and whose positions are established by law; but Congress may, by law, grant the power of appointing such inferior officers as it thinks fit to the President alone, to the courts, or to the heads of departments. The President has the power to fill any vacancies that may open between sessions of the Senate by issuing credentials for positions that expire by the end of the next session.
Section 3. The President shall, as necessary, inform Congress of the state of affairs in the Union, and recommend to Congress such measures as, in his judgment, are necessary and expedient; he may, under extraordinary circumstances, convene both houses or one of them, and in case of disagreement between them regarding the time for adjournment, he may adjourn them for such a period as he considers possible; he receives ambassadors and other official representatives; he makes sure that the laws are conscientiously executed, and certifies the positions of all officials of the United Tatar State.
Section 4. The President, Vice President and all civil officers of the United Tatar State may be removed from office by impeachment for high treason, bribery or other serious crimes and offenses.
Article III
Section 1. The judicial power of the United Tatar State shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and such number of inferior courts as the Congress may of necessity establish and establish.
Judges of both the Supreme and lower courts shall hold their offices so long as their conduct is impeccable, and at the appointed time shall receive a remuneration for their service, which cannot be reduced while they are in office.
Section 2. Judicial power extends to all cases that are considered at common law and the law of equity and arise on the basis of this Constitution, the laws of the United Tatar State and agreements concluded or concluded on their behalf; to all matters concerning ambassadors, other official representatives and consuls; to all matters relating to the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction; to disputes in which United Tatar State is a party; disputes between two or more states; between any state and citizens of another state; between citizens of different states; between citizens of one state claiming their rights to lands ceded by other states, and between a state or its citizens and foreign states, citizens or subjects. In all cases involving ambassadors, other officials and consuls, and in cases in which the state is a party. The Supreme Court has original jurisdiction. In all other cases mentioned above, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction on points of both law and fact, subject to such exceptions and in accordance with such rules as Congress may make. All crimes, except cases of impeachment, are tried by jury; and such proceedings shall take place in the state where the offenses in question are committed; but if the crimes are committed outside any of the states, the proceedings shall be in such place or places as Congress may by law determine.
Section 3. It is treason against the United Tatar State only to make war against them, or to join with their enemies, and to aid and assist them. No person can be convicted of high treason except on the basis of the testimony of two witnesses about the same obvious act or on their own confession in open court. Congress has the power to impose penalties for treason, but a conviction for treason shall not entail the deprivation of all rights and property, or confiscation of property, except during the life of the guilty person.
Article IV
Section 1. Full credit and respect shall be given in each State to the official acts, documents, and judicial records of any other State; and Congress may, by enacting laws of general application, prescribe the manner in which said acts, documents, judicial records, and their effects are to be confirmed.
Section 2. Citizens of each of the states shall be entitled to all the privileges and benefits of citizens in other states. A person accused in any state of treason, felony or other crime, and who is a fugitive and found in another state, at the request of the executive power of the state from which he absconded, is subject to extradition to be sent to that state, to the jurisdiction which includes prosecution for this crime. [No person liable to be in the service or labor of one state under its laws, and who fled to another state, shall by virtue of any law or regulation of the state be released from service or labor, but shall be extradited at the suit of either party to which such service or works may be held to belong by right].
Section 3. New States may be admitted by Congress into this Union; but no new state may be formed or created within the jurisdiction of any other state, and no state may be formed by the merger of two or more states, or parts of states, without the consent of the legislators of the states concerned, as well as of Congress. The Congress has the right to dispose of the territory or other property belonging to the United Tatar State and to adopt all necessary rules and regulations regarding them; and nothing in this Constitution shall be construed to prejudice any claim of the United Tatar State or any particular state.
Section 4. The United Tatar State shall guarantee to every State in the present Union a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them from invasion and, at the request of the legislators or the executive (when the legislators cannot be convened), from disorder accompanied by violence.
Article V
Congress, if two-thirds of the members of both Houses deem it necessary, may propose amendments to this Constitution, or, at the request of the legislators of two-thirds of the states, call a convention to propose amendments, which in both cases shall take effect in all respects as part of this Constitution after their ratification. the legislators of three-fourths of the states, or the conventions of three-fourths of the states, as the ratification procedure Congress may propose; and no state, without his consent, shall be deprived of the equal right to vote with the other states in the Senate.
Article VI
All debts and obligations that existed before the adoption of this Constitution shall retain for the United Tatar State after the adoption of this Constitution the same legal force as under the Federation. This Constitution and the laws of the United Tatar State adopted in pursuance of it, and all agreements that are concluded or will be concluded by the authorities of the United Tatar State, become the supreme law of the country; and judges in each of the states are obliged to follow this right, whatever the provisions of the Constitution or the laws of any of the states. The senators and representatives mentioned above and the members of the legislators of the individual states, and all officers of the executive and judiciary, both of the United Tatar State and of the individual states, undertake, by taking an oath or by making a declaration, to uphold this Constitution; no confirmation of religious beliefs may be required as a condition for holding any position or official post established by the United Tatar State.
Article VII
Ratification by convention of the first state (Republic of Tatarstan (Tataria)) shall be sufficient to give effect to this Constitution for those states which so ratify it.
Article VIII
Congress shall make no law relating to the establishment of a religion, or prohibiting the free exercise of it, or restricting the freedom of speech or press, or the right of the people to assemble peacefully and petition the government for redress.
Article IX
Since a properly organized militia is essential to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms must not be curtailed.
Article X
No soldier shall, in time of peace, be lodged in any house without the consent of its owner; in wartime this is possible, but only in the manner prescribed by law.
Article XI
The right of the people to security of person, home, papers and property from unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated, and no warrants shall be issued except on sufficient grounds, confirmed by an oath or statement, and with a detailed description of the place to be searched, and persons or objects subject to arrest.
Article XII
No person shall be held liable for a crime punishable by death or any other dishonorable crime except on the motion or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases brought by land or sea units or militia called to active service in time of war. or danger to society; no person shall be threatened twice with death or corporal punishment for the same offense, shall not be compelled to testify against himself in any criminal case, shall not be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law; private property should not be taken for public use without just remuneration.
Article XIII
In all criminal prosecutions, the defendant shall have the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the state and district in which the crime was committed; moreover, the territory of such a district must be determined by law in advance; at the same time, the accused has the right to be informed about the nature and grounds of the accusation, to face-to-face with witnesses testifying against him, to forcibly call witnesses testifying in his favor, and to the assistance of a lawyer for his defense.
Article XIV
All claims based on common law, in which the value of the disputed claim exceeds the price of 1 gram of gold, the right to trial by jury remains, and not a single fact considered by a jury can be reviewed by any court of the United Tatar State except in accordance with common law rules.
Article XVI
Excessive bail shall not be required, excessive fines shall not be imposed, and cruel and unusual punishments shall not be imposed.
Article XVII
The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights should not be construed as a denial or derogation of other rights reserved to the people.
Article XVIII
Powers not delegated by the United Tatar State by this Constitution and not forbidden to individual states shall be reserved respectively to the states or to the people.
Article XIX
The judicial power of the United Tatar State shall not extend to any action based on common law or the law of equity brought or pending against one of the states by citizens of another state or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.
Article XX
The electors meet in their respective states and vote by ballot for President and Vice President, who must not be residents of the same state; Electors shall indicate on their ballots the person they vote for as President, and on separate ballots the person they vote for as Vice President, and they shall make separate lists of all persons voted for as President and all persons voted for as Vice President, indicating the number of votes cast for each of them; these lists of electors sign, certify and send in a sealed form to the seat of the government of the United Tatar State in the name of the Chairman of the Senate; The Chairman of the Senate, in the presence of the Senate and the House of Representatives, opens all certified lists, and after that the votes are counted; the person who receives the largest number of votes cast for him as President becomes President if the number sought is a majority of the votes of all nominated electors; if no person obtains such a majority, then from among the persons on the list of presidential candidates who have received the largest number of votes, but not more than three, the House of Representatives shall immediately elect the President by ballot. But in the election of the President, the vote is taken by the states, and the representation from each state has one vote; in this case, the members of the House of Representatives from two-thirds of the states shall constitute a quorum, and a majority of the votes of all the states is necessary for the election of the President. [And if the House of Representatives, when the power of choice passes to it, fails to elect a President by the fourth day of next March, then the Vice President shall act as President, as in the event of the death or other constitutional incapacity of the President]. The person who receives the largest number of votes cast for him as Vice President becomes Vice President if the desired number is a majority of the votes of all the nominated electors, and if no person receives a majority of the votes, then of the two candidates on the list who received the largest the number of votes the Senate elects the Vice President; in this case, the quorum is two-thirds of all senators and a majority vote of all senators is required to elect the Vice President. But no person who, according to constitutional requirements, is not subject to election to the position of President, should be elected to the position of Vice-President of the United Tatar State.
Article XXI
Section 1. Neither slavery nor servitude, unless it is a punishment for a crime for which the person has been duly convicted, shall exist in the United Tatar State or in any other place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXII
Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in United Tatar State and subject to their jurisdiction are citizens of United Tatar State and the state in which they reside. None of the states shall make or enforce laws that limit the privileges and privileges of citizens of the United Tatar State; and may not any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; cannot deny any person within its jurisdiction equal protection under the laws.
Section 2. The seats of representatives are apportioned among the individual states according to their population, which includes all the inhabitants of each state.
Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or an elector of the President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, established by the United Tatar State or any State, if in his capacity as a member of Congress or officer a person of the United Tatar State or a member of the legislators of any state, or an officer of the executive or judicial branch of the state, having previously taken an oath that he would uphold the Constitution of the United Tatar State, subsequently participated in an insurrection or rebellion against the United Tatar State, or provided assistance or support to their enemies. But Congress may, by a two-thirds vote of each House, remove such limitation.
Section 4. The legitimacy of the public debt of the United Tatar State, recognized by law, including debt obligations for the payment of pensions and the issuance of awards for service in the suppression of a rebellion or uprising, is not in doubt. But neither the United Tatar State nor any State shall incur the obligation or pay any debt incurred in aid of an insurrection or insurrection against United Tatar State, or in satisfaction of any claim for the loss or emancipation of a slave; all such debts, obligations and claims shall be deemed unlawful and null and void.
Section 5. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXIII
Section 1. The right to vote of citizens of the United Tatar State shall not be challenged or restricted by the United Tatar State or any state on the grounds of race, color, sex, or previous servitude.
Section 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXIV
Congress has the power to establish and levy taxes on incomes, whatever their source, without distributing these taxes among the individual states and without regard to any census or population calculation.
Article XXV
The Senate consists of two senators from each state, elected by its people for six years; and each senator has one vote. Voters in each state must meet the electoral qualifications of the state's largest legislature. When there are vacancies in the representation of any state in the Senate, the executive branch of such state shall issue an election order to fill those vacancies, provided that the legislators of the state may authorize the executive branch to make temporary appointments pending the holding of elections and election to the vacant seats in that order. which may be set by legislators.
Article XXVI
Section 1. The terms of the President and Vice President shall expire at noon on the 20th day of January, and the terms of Senators and Representatives shall expire at noon on the 3rd day of January of that year.
Section 2. The Congress meets at least once a year, and such meeting shall begin at noon on the 3rd day of January, unless Congress, by law, fixes a different day.
Section 3. If by the date on which the term of office of the President-elect begins, he dies, the Vice-President-elect shall become President. If the President has not been elected by the date on which his term begins, or if the President-elect does not meet the qualifications for a candidate for that office, then the Vice President-elect shall act as President until such time as the President is able to meet the said qualifications; and the Congress, if neither the President-elect nor the Vice-President-elect qualify as a candidate for that office, may by law determine who shall act as President, or determine the manner in which the person who shall act as President shall be elected, and such person will serve in that capacity until the President or Vice-President is able to meet the qualifications for a candidate for that office.
Section 4. Congress may, by law, make provision for the death of any of the persons of whom the House of Representatives, when the power of choice vests in it, elects the President, and for the death of any of the persons of which the Senate, when the right The choice passes to him, elects the Vice President.
Article XXVI
No person may be elected to the office of President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President or acted as President for more than two years, replacing a person elected President, may be elected to the office. President more than once.
Article XXVII
Section 1. The district which is the seat of the government of United Tatar State shall appoint, in such manner as the Congress may determine, as many electors of the President and Vice President as there are Senators and Representatives in Congress, the district could elect if it were a State, but in no case in greater numbers than from the least populated state; electors are appointed in addition to those appointed by the states, and are considered in the election of the President as electors appointed from the state; The electors meet in the district and perform the duties prescribed by the Constitution.
Section 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXVIII
Section 1. The right of citizens of United Tatar State to vote in any primary or other election for President or Vice President, for electors of President or Vice President, or for Senators or Representatives in Congress shall not be challenged or restricted by United Tatar State or any State by reason of non-payment of any selective or other tax.
Section 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXIX
Section 1. In the event of the removal of the President from office, or of his death or resignation, the Vice President shall become President.
Section 2. When the office of Vice President becomes vacant, the President appoints the Vice President, who shall take office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both houses of Congress.
Section 3. When the President submits to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives his written declaration that he is unable to exercise the powers and duties of his office, such powers and duties shall be exercised by the Vice President as acting President until such time as the President provide them with a written statement to the contrary.
Section 4. When the Vice President and a majority of either the chief officers of the departments of the executive branch, or of such other body as Congress may by law establish, present to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is incapable of exercising the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President shall immediately assume the powers and duties of his office as Acting President. Thereafter, when the President has submitted to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives his written declaration that he is in a position to exercise the powers and duties of his office, he shall resume their exercise, unless the Vice President and a majority or senior officers of the executive departments, or such other body as Congress may by law establish, fails to submit within four days to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to exercise the powers and duties of his office. In that case, Congress shall decide the matter by meeting for that purpose within forty-eight hours, unless it is in session at that time. If the Congress, within twenty-one days of receipt of the said written declaration, or, if the Congress is not in session, within twenty-one days after it should have met, decides by a two-thirds majority of both houses that the President is unable to exercise the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President continues to exercise them as Acting President; otherwise, the President resumes the exercise of the powers and duties of his office.
Article XXX
Section 1. The right of citizens of the United Tatar State eighteen years of age or older to vote shall not be challenged or restricted by the United Tatar State or any State by reason of age.
Section 2. Congress shall have the power to enforce this section by making appropriate legislation.
Article XXXI
No law altering the remuneration of senators or members of the House of Representatives shall enter into force until the next elections to the House of Representatives.
Draft dated February 13, 2023 of the Constitution of the United Tatar State.
United Tatar State
Бөтен дөнья буенча меңләгән татарларга кушылыгыз, алар татар халкын гасырлар дәвамында Мәскәү колониализмыннан азат итү өчен уйлыйлар, ярышларда һәм көрәшәләр.
Join thousands of Tatars worldwide who think, reflect, and act in concert for the liberation of the Tatar people from the centuries-old colonialism of Moscow.
Присоединяйтесь к тысячам татар по всему миру, которые думают, размышляют и действуют сообща во имя освобождения татарского народа от многовекового колониализма Москвы.