Senate passes Bill to enable Constitution changes
Publish date: 22 June 2026
Issue Number: 1182
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: DRC
The DRC’s Senate has passed a Bill on holding referendums in the country, a step that could enable President Felix Tshisekedi to change the Constitution and seek a third term, reports TRT Afrika. The Senate vote came days after anti- and pro-Tshisekedi demonstrators clashed at a protest against the government's plans to change the Constitution, which the opposition condemns as a bid by the President to cling to power. In office since 2019, Tshisekedi comes to the end of his second – and, under the current Constitution, final – five-year term in 2028. The Bill that passed the Senate, which cleared the lower house earlier this month, is a technical text on the organisation of referendums. But it could pave the way for a push to remove the Congolese Constitution's two-term limit for presidents. The Bill now needs a green light from the Constitutional Court, then would go to Tshisekedi to sign. Tshisekedi’s coalition holds a large majority in Parliament. The main opposition parties came together last month in a coalition to oppose what they see as the President's attempt to cling to power. Several opposition figures were wounded in last Friday's protest, which erupted into skirmishes with government supporters and police, AFP journalists said.