Constituent Assembly of Peru explained

Constituent Assembly
Native Name:Asamblea Constituyente
Coa Res:250px
Legislature:Republic of Peru
House Type:Unicameral
Leader1 Type:President of the Constituent Assembly
Leader1:Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre
Party1:Peruvian Aprista Party
Members:100
Meeting Place:Legislative Palace (Peru)
Established:28 July 1978
Disbanded:13 July 1979
Preceded By:Congress of the Republic of Peru
Succeeded By:Congress of the Republic of Peru

The Constituent Assembly was the tenth Constituent Assembly of Peru, convened by the government of General Francisco Morales Bermudez to facilitate the return of democracy following a decade of the self-styled Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces. It was settled on 28 July 1978 and was led by Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, historical leader of the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance. Its main mission was to develop a new constitution replacing the old 1933 Constitution. This new Constitution was enacted and promulgated on 12 July 1979, and entered into force on 28 July 1980, on the opening of the constitutional government of the architect Fernando Belaúnde Terry. It was replaced 14 years later by the 1993 Constitution.

Composition and Structure

Board

Representatives

Peruvian Aprista Party
Christian People's Party
Popular Workers Student Farmers Front
Peruvian Communist Party
Revolutionary Socialist Party
Popular Democratic Union
Workers and Farmers National Front
Christian Democrat Party
Peruvian Democratic Movement
Odriist National Union

Innovations of the Constitution

The main innovations of this Constitution, compared to its predecessor, were: