In the case of how this has raised in Nicaragua has given much to talk about how that was adopted, in which gave a break to constitutional order. The concern is more very significant when the room constitutional of the Supreme Court of Justice (CSJ) of Nicaragua declared unenforceable an article of the Constitution which prohibits continuous re-election, in a ruling that favors the reelectionists plans of the President Daniel Ortega in elections in 2011. He says, that the Constitutional Court declares the inapplicability of an article of the Magna Carta that inhibits the President and Vice President run for a second consecutive period in Office, according to the judge Francisco Rosales to read the opinion to the press. Failure indicates that the President of the Republic (.) You can perfectly run as a candidate in elections in 2011. The judgment seeks to annul a constitutional provision approved by the legislature in 1995 in order to avoid that the Nicaraguan rulers perpetuated in power.
The resolution of the Constitutional Chamber of the CSJ was approved by six judges related to the ruling Sandinista Front (FSLN, left), in response to an appeal submitted by Ortega on 15 October last the Council Supreme Electoral is also knows that the judges of the Constitutional Court also ordered the Electoral Council free a certification attesting to President Ortega so that it can participate in the elections of 2011. The sentence was handed down in the midst of the difficulties facing the Government Bank to gather the necessary votes in Congress to approve a constitutional reform, which would include among other things the possibility of continuous re-election. The Partido Liberal Constitucionalista (PLC), main opposition force, in a statement condemned the Court decision, which said seeking the re-election of Ortega wreaking all the legal and constitutional mechanisms. Remember, that Ortega, who ruled for the first time Nicaragua during the sandinista revolution (1979-90), returned to the Government in January 2007 after winning in popular elections.