110th Congress of Zamastan (2022-2024): Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 248: Line 248:
====[[Cayenne (Province)|Cayenne]]====
====[[Cayenne (Province)|Cayenne]]====
: {{color box|yellow}} 1. Thaddeus Leon (LHZ)
: {{color box|yellow}} 1. Thaddeus Leon (LHZ)
: {{color box|yellow}} 2. Isaac Byrne (LHZ)
: {{color box|yellow}} 2. [[Isaac Byrne]] (LHZ)
: {{color box|blue}} 3. Harrison Cammuta (BCP)
: {{color box|blue}} 3. Harrison Cammuta (BCP)
: {{color box|yellow}} 4. Martha Lloyd (LHZ)
: {{color box|yellow}} 4. Martha Lloyd (LHZ)

Revision as of 17:27, 4 September 2022

110th Congress of Zamastan
Structure
Seats413 voting members
  • 104 senators
  • 305 congressmen
RealZamastanSenateSeats2022to2024.svg
Senate political groups
  •   47 BCP
  •   31 GLP
  •   4 LHZ
  •   3 CCP
  •   3 PPZ
  •   13 PAP
  •   3 CUP
RealZamastanCongressSeats2022to2024.svg
Congress Chamber political groups
The 2022 Congress Chamber election map

The 110th Congress of Zamastan was a meeting of the legislative branch of the Zamastanian federal government, between September 22nd 2022 and September 22nd 2024. It was composed of the Senate and the Congress Chamber. The members in the legislature were elected in the 2022 general election, and was notable for being the first congress formed without the provinces of Mayotte, Alutiana, and Auraine, which had been granted secession following the Bettencourt decision in 2021. The 109th Congress had a Green Liberal majority in both houses, with a collective opposition formed through the merger of Conservative and Libertarian Blocs. However, the notable void of Bloc Mayotte lawmakers who were unable to vote past the 1 January 2021 Bettencourt decision meant there was little legislation passed in comparison to other years.

Though the GLP kept its majority in the 110th congress, its lead was narrowed dramatically due in large part to the departure of the party's most left-wing members in the Progressive Alliance, forming a separate political party. However, this allowed the Liberal Bloc coalition to create an effective 179-126 majority. The BCP only gained 4 seats, and the addition of their coalition partners in the LHZ and CUP losing seats meant their opposition was narrowed to its furthest since 2006.

Major events

Major legislation

Leadership

Senate

Majority coalition leadership

Minority coalition leadership

Congress Chamber

Majority coalition leadership

  • Majority Leader:
  • Majority Whip:
  • Majority Chief Deputy Whip:
  • Chamber Rules Committee Chairman:

Minority coalition leadership

  • Minority Leader:
  • Minority Whip:
  • Assistant Minority Leader:
  • Minority Chief Deputy Whip:

List of Senators

Key

List of Congressmen

Key

Committees

Senate

Congress Chamber