In France, the fundamental principles recognized by the laws of the Republic (French: principes fondamentaux reconnus par les lois de la République, abbreviated to PFRLR) are certain principles recognized by the Constitutional Council and the Council of State as having constitutional force.
This concept is mentioned briefly in the preamble of the Constitution of 1946. The preamble of the constitution of 1958 references the 1946 preamble, and the constitutional judges, in their "freedom of association" ruling, decision nð71-44 DC of 16 July 1971, gave constitutional force to this preamble.
Fundamental principles were mentioned in a budget law of 31 March 1931 (article 91) to characterize This was adopted as a compromise by deputies from the Popular Republican Movement (MRP) when writing the Constitution of the Fourth Republic, since the SFIO (socialist) and PCF (communist) deputies had declared themselves hostile to a constitutionalization of this freedom along with the other rights cited in the preamble.
The principles attached to this notion were defined by the judge. First, the Council of State identified freedom of association as a fundamental principle, initially basing it on a 1956 appellate decision, and then from 1971 on, the Constitutional Council's Decision #71-44 DC on freedom of association as well.
Today, the fundamental principles designate in the modern spirit the landmark laws of the first, second, and third republics, notably freedom of conscience and freedom of association.
The extensive constitutional body of law developed by the Constitutional Council since 1971 gave constitutional force to some principles by making them fundamental principles recognized by the laws of the Republic (PFRLR). These essential principles of French law, created by the legislature but not specified in the constitution or raised as a constitutional norm, such as the principle of independence of administrative jurisdiction or freedom of association, were then imposed on the legislature and administration.
PFRLRs are mainly defined by constitutional judges, even though their first mention was by the Council of State. Constitutional judges consider themselves not creators but interpreters of these principles, to avoid concerns of âÂÂgovernment by the judgesâÂÂ.
The Constitutional Council verified four criteria before recognizing the PFRLR. Thus, a principle must come from:
Since 2013 and Decision no. 2013-669 DC of 17 May 2013 âÂÂLaw providing for same-sex marriageâÂÂ, three new conditions have been identified. On this occasion, the Council ruled that the opposite-sex character of marriage was not a PFRLR.
The principles must pertain to at least one of the following topics:
As of April 2022, the Constitutional Council has identified eleven principles as PFRLR:
Furthermore, the Council of State in 1996 identified the prohibition of political extradition.
The PFRLRs are to be distinguished from other principles identified by the Constitutional Council: