About the Constitution

Key Changes in the New Constitution

The new Constitution preserves the foundations of statehood but changes the architecture of power and strengthens citizens' rights. Key changes: transition to a unicameral parliament, introduction of the Vice President, expansion of digital rights, and strengthened mechanisms of popular oversight.

1. SYSTEM OF POWER: From Bicameral Parliament to Kurultai

Before:

Now:

Why:

2. VICE PRESIDENT: A New Institution of Continuity

What is introduced:

How appointed:

Functions:

3. CITIZENS' RIGHTS: Digital Rights and Procedural Guarantees

a) Digital rights (new block):

b) Rights upon detention:

c) Presumption of innocence:

d) Peaceful assemblies:

4. POPULAR PARTICIPATION: Institutionalizing Dialogue

Kazakhstan People's Council (Khalyq Keñesi):

Strengthened right to petitions:

5. WHAT DOES NOT CHANGE

Preserved:

"Before and After" Table

Item 1995 Constitution 2026 Constitution
Parliament Senate (49) + Mazhilis (98) Kurultai (145)
Parliamentary powers 13 functions 23 functions
Vice President No Yes (with Kurultai consent)
Detention period 72 hours 48 hours
Digital rights Not regulated Data protection, communication privacy
People's Council Informal status Constitutional status
President 7 years, single term 7 years, single term (unchanged)

Full text of the 2026 Constitution · 1995 Constitution

Key facts