The South African constitutional court and the rule of law: The masethla judgement, a cause for concre?
Abstract
The rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of
public power but the precise limits of the constraints it sets are not well defined. In
Masethla v President of the Republic of South Africa,1 the majority of the
Constitutional Court opted for an interpretation of this value that frees the President
from adherence to the demands of procedural fairness when exercising certain
constitutional powers. This note will investigate the soundness of that interpretation
against the background of theoretical expositions of the rule of law and earlier
Constitutional Court judgments.