Early proposals The 1978 constitution adopted on independence was widely seen as a transitional document. At the
1980 general election, the
Solomon Islands United Party led by Prime Minister
Peter Kenilorea emerged as the largest party in the
National Parliament, running on a platform that included replacing the monarchy with an indigenous ceremonial presidency. Kenilorea was subsequently replaced as prime minister by his opponent
Solomon Mamaloni, who favoured an
executive presidency and appointed a committee to revise the constitution on those lines. However, Mamaloni was defeated at the
1984 election and the committee was dissolved. In 1987, Prime Minister
Ezekiel Alebua appointed a Constitutional Review Committee, chaired by his predecessor Solomon Mamaloni. The committee's report presented in 1988 again recommended abolition of the monarchy as part of a wider process of
indigenisation, with only indigenous Solomon Islanders eligible to become president. The new president was to have greater powers than the governor-general, such as greater powers to dissolve parliament on their own initiative, but without a full executive presidency. Mamaloni was re-elected prime minister
in 1989, but failed to bring about the committee's recommendations.
21st century A further process of constitutional review was initiated in response to civil unrest which broke out in Solomon Islands in the late 1990s, with the
Townsville Peace Agreement of 2000 requiring the government to establish a constitutional council. The
Federal Constitution of Solomon Islands Bill 2004 produced by the process envisaged Solomon Islands becoming a federal republic. In 2007 the government established the Constitutional Congress, which produced further draft federal constitutions in 2009 and 2011; the latter provided for the country to be renamed the Democratic Federal Republic of Solomon Islands. A further revised draft Constitution of the Republic of Solomon Islands was released by the Solomon Islands government in 2018. In 2022, Prime Minister
Manasseh Sogavare promised to enact the new federal constitution by 2026, following pressure from
Guadalcanal provincial leaders. Sogavare's government amended the constitution in 2023 to establish a process for the repeal of the 1978 constitution, including the creation of a Constituent Assembly which would approve a final constitution based on the 2018 draft for a parliamentary vote. ==References==