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[[File:GreatHall_auditorium.jpg|400px|thumb|right|The All-Nation Social Consultative Assembly Hall, used by the NSCC during its annual session.]]
[[File:GreatHall_auditorium.jpg|400px|thumb|right|The All-Nation Social Consultative Assembly Hall, used by the NSCC during its annual session.]]


The '''National Social Consultative Conference''' ([[Menghean_language#Gomun|Gomun]]: 全國社會協議會, [[Menghean_language#Sinmun|Sinmun]]: 전국 사회 협의회, pr. ''Jŏnguk Sahoe Hyŏbyihoue''), also translated "All-Nation Social Consultative Conference" and usually abbreviated '''NSCC''' in official English translations, is a political advisory body in the [[Menghe|Socialist Republic of Menghe]]. It convenes once a year in November to compile reports drafted by its working groups, and to vote on a series of non-binding advisory resolutions, which are passed on to the [[National Assembly (Menghe)|National Assembly]] and [[Supreme Council of Menghe|Supreme Council]].
The '''National Social Consultative Conference''' ([[Menghean_language#Gomun|Gomun]]: 全國社會協議會, [[Menghean_language#Sinmun|Sinmun]]: 전국 사회 협의회, pr. ''Jŏnguk Sahoe Hyŏbyihoe''), also translated "All-Nation Social Consultative Conference" and usually abbreviated '''NSCC''' in official English translations, is a political advisory body in the [[Menghe|Socialist Republic of Menghe]]. It forms the head of a chain of [[Social Consultative Conferences]], which also exist at the [[Administrative divisions of Menghe|Provincial and Prefectural levels]].


Representatives to the NSCC are broken up into nineteen "social backgrounds," each corresponding to a given occupation. This gives the body a distinctively {{wp|Corporatism|corporatist}} character, defining representatives in terms of occupation rather than political party or geographic area.
In place of political parties, representatives to the NSCC are broken up into fourteen "social backgrounds," each corresponding to a given occupation or field. Voters cast ballots by identifying the social background that they most identify with, and seats are filled through {{wp|proportional representation}} with umbrella interest organizations serving as parties. This gives the body a distinctively {{wp|Corporatism|corporatist}} character, with proportional elected representatives of labor, business, military, and other social interests.


In contrast to the National Assembly, the NSCC is not a formal {{wp|Legislature|legislative body}} and lacks the power to draft or pass laws. Instead, its annual meetings are devoted to compiling non-binding advisory reports for the National Assembly and Supreme Council to consider. Its members are not subject to direct election, but are appointed indirectly by the Provincial Social Consultative Conferences.
In contrast to the National Assembly, the NSCC is not a formal {{wp|Legislature|legislative body}} and lacks the power to draft or pass laws. It also convenes just once a year, for three weeks in July, to hear reports drafted by the Provincial SCCs and compile a non-binding advisory resolution which is then passed on to the [[National Assembly (Menghe)|National Assembly]] and [[Supreme Council of Menghe|Supreme Council]]. In light of this limited role, some scholars have referred to the NSCC as a "quasi-legislature."


==History==
==History==
Menghe's Social Consultative Conference system first emerged in 1993, after [[Choe Sŭng-min]] issued a proclamation encouraging village- and county-level governments to "organize all-societal conferences for constructive negotiation between representatives of the Five Classes." The vaguely worded document did not lay out detailed guidelines for selecting representatives, nor did it specify what the "Five Classes" were. It also treated the conferences as informal events organized by local Party branches, rather than formal state institutions. As a result, early village and county conferences differed dramatically in composition and structure.
The first round of so-called "Social Consultative Conferences" were held in May 1993, after [[Choe Sŭng-min]] issued a proclamation encouraging prefecture-level governments to organize "Five-Class meetings" with representatives for laborers, farmers, professionals, petty entrepreneurs, and state-owned enterprises. The vaguely worded document did not lay down any guidelines about the selection of representatives, nor did it provide for a national-level parent body.


The class-occupation structure of the Consultative Conferences stemmed from Menghe's [[Economic_reform_in_Menghe|ongoing economic reforms]], which had already brought noticeable growth but were also generating tension among hardline Socialists. By giving farmers, workers, and employers a place to negotiate collectively under state oversight, local Conferences aimed to alleviate labor unrest, and to ensure that development was mutually beneficial to all groups. In the process, the Party implicitly recognized laborers and early private entrepreneurs as equals, signaling Choe's pivot toward a corporatist vision of Socialism.
The SCCs were legally formalized in February of 1998, when the National Assembly drafted the Foundational Law on Social Consultative Conferences and enshrined this document in the 1989 Constitution by amendment. In addition to converting the Prefectural SCCs into formal government bodies, the Fundamental Law on SCCs established Provincial and National Social Consultative Conferences, the first sessions of which would convene that summer through special indirect elections. Subsequent sessions of the NSCC and its lower-level counterparts were filled through the [[Social_Consultative_Conferences#Elections|election process]] spelled out in the Fundamental Law.


In May 1998, at the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Socialist Republic of Menghe, the National Assembly formally amended the Menghean Constitution to enshrine the Social Consultative Conference system in law. The amendment laid out detailed election procedures, designated specific class categories, and added indirectly elected conferences at the Prefectural, Provincial, and National levels, with the latter forming today's NSCC.
Initially, the NSCC was a "window dressing institution" with little policy influence. Its first few sessions, which took place during the [[Disciplined Society Campaign]], heaped praise on [[Choe Sŭng-min]] and expressed a unified commitment to economic cooperation, even as the [[1999 Menghean financial crisis]] shook the economy. Over time, however, the NSCC grew more assertive in raising sensitive policy issues, such as environmental protection, labor rights, and gender equality. The 29th National Social Consultative Conference, held in July 2017, called for the relaxation or abolition of the [[Household Registration System (Menghe)|Household Registration System]], a contentious issue in light of Menghe's large population of internal migrants.


==Delegates==
==Represented social backgrounds==
Most delegates to the NSCC are elected indirectly by the Provincial Social Consultative Conferences. The main exceptions are the Army and Navy delegations, which are appointed by the Ministry of Defense; the Socialist Party delegation, which is elected by the [[Menghe_Socialist_Party#Central_Committee|Central Committee of the Socialist Party]]; and the Cultural Arts and Academia delegations, which are elected by their relevant associations under the Ministry of Culture.
Every year, the [[National Assembly (Menghe)|National Assembly]] compiles a list of "social backgrounds" or corporate interest groups which will be represented in the coming SCC elections. The list generally remains the same from year to year, with the occasional addition of new interest groups, if they are deemed large and significant enough to merit national attention. The "women outside the labor force" category was added in 2001, and the "university students" category in 2012.
 
In all election areas, the Consultative Election Management Board screens candidates to ensure that all are loyal to the MSP's rule and will not call for radical change. Similar screening takes place at lower levels. Even after selection, the NSCC Personnel Board can suspend delegates at any time for "desabilizing remarks." Among delegates who support the Party, however, the selection process is relatively competitive, with an average of three candidates considered for each position in the Provincial SCCs. Since 2002, NSCC delegates have not been required to hold membership in the [[Menghe Socialist Party]], though over 60% do.


Each NSCC delegate is assigned to a "social background," and is expected to advocate for the problems of citizens sharing a similar background, though not at the expense of cooperation with others. Geographic representation is treated only as a secondary concern. This {{wp|Corporatism|corporatist}} structure formally recognizes negotiation based on social group. In the 19th National Social Consultative Conference, which convened in November 2017, there were nineteen recognized "social backgrounds:"
Each social background is matched with a single officially recognized nationwide umbrella organization representing the interests of its members. A few of these bodies, like the MoND's Social Consultation Directorate, are attached to government bodies, but the rest are formally non-government organizations. Even so, they are not fully independent of the regime, as all have a high density of [[Menghean Socialist Party|Socialist Party]] members among their top-level staff and maintain built-in Party Committees for ideological guidance. The All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions, for example, is much less militant than national labor unions in other countries, and generally encourages joint negotiation with management over strikes and protests.


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+Composition of the 20th National Social Consultative Conference (November 2017)
|+Listed Interest Groups in the 2019 SCC Elections
! scope="col" style="width: 500px;" | Social background
! scope="col" style="width: 50px;" | #
! scope="col" style="width: 150px;" | Number of delegates
! scope="col" style="width: 400px;" | Social background
! scope="col" style="width: 150px;" | Percent of total
! scope="col" style="width: 500px;" | Umbrella Organization
|-
| '''Appointed groups '''  || '''527''' || '''18.1%'''
|-
| Socialist Party leading cadres || 207 || 7.1%
|-
| Army officers and personnel || 118 || 4.0%
|-
| Navy officers and personnel || 96 || 3.3%
|-
| Scientists and academics || 64 || 2.1%
|-
| Artists, Poets, Musicians, and Cultural Figures || 42 || 1.4%
|-
| '''Elected Groups''' || '''2,391''' || '''81.9%'''
|-
| Employers and large entrepreneurs || 211 || 7.2%
|-
|-
| Self-employed and small business owners || 362 || 12.4%
| 1 || Socialist Party cadres || SCC Bureau of the Menghean Socialist Party
|-
|-
| Police and security personnel || 216 || 7.4%
| 2 || Military officers and personnel || Social Consultation Directorate of the [[Ministry of National Defense (Menghe)|MoND]]
|-
|-
| Doctors and medical staff || 53 || 1.8%
| 3 || Police and security personnel || Social Consultation Directorate of the [[Ministry of Internal Security (Menghe)|MIS]]
|-
|-
| Clerks and office workers || 171 || 5.9%
| 4 || Large entrepreneurs and management || Commission for Prosperity
|-
|-
| Skilled workers and professionals || 97 || 3.3%
| 5 || Small business owners and self-employed || National Small Enterprise Association
|-
|-
| Street-level civil servants || 86 || 2.9%
| 6 || Skilled workers and professionals || National Union of Skilled Workers
|-
|-
| Women outside the labor force || 183 || 6.3%
| 7 || Artists, writers, musicians, and cultural figures || National Artists' Association
|-
|-
| Pensioners and retirees || 75 || 2.6%
| 8 || University students || National Higher Education Association
|-
|-
| Industrial laborers and construction workers || 402 || 13.8%
| 9 || Industrial, construction, and other blue-collar workers || All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions
|-
|-
| Private-sector service employees || 124 || 4.2%
| 10 || Unskilled or semiskilled service employees || All-Menghe Service Workers' Union
|-
|-
| Farmers and pastoralists || 298 || 10.2%
| 11 || Agricultural workers || Menghean Agriculture Organization
|-
|-
| Fishermen and sailors || 68 || 2.3%
| 12 || Fishermen, sailors, and nautical workers || Organization of Nautical Labor
|-
|-
| Miners, oilmen, and resource workers || 45 || 1.5%
| 13 || Pensioners || National Association of Retired Persons
|-
|-
| '''Total''' || '''2,918''' || '''100%'''
| 14 || Women outside the labor force || Patriotic Association of Mothers and Wives
|}
|}


The sizes of the different delegations are set by law, but are revised annually. They are not proportional to that occupation's share of employment, with the result that upper- and middle-class occupations are over-represented at the cost of their working-class counterparts. Nevertheless, workers and farmers are better-represented in the NSCC than in the National Assembly, where all representatives are full-time government employees.
==Delegates==
The allocation of seats in the NSCC follows the same general scheme as that used for the National Assembly. Each of Menghe's provinces, including the four directly-governed city, is treated as a single multi-member district, and seats within that unit are distributed to the different interest groups proportional to their vote share. Compared with Provincial and Prefectural SCC elections, the procedure for dividing up the "remainder" in each vote group - the votes left over once the largest number of whole-number seats is deducted from each - is slightly different, and is designed to ensure that the number of seats allocated to each group nationally matches up with its nationwide vote share.
 
Once all seats are allocated, each interest group fills them using a pre-prepared ranked list of candidates, functionally similar to a party list. The Fundamental Law on SCCs allows a formally designated umbrella organization for each interest group to determine its own procedure for assembling a candidate list. Some, like the Social Consultation Directorate of the [[Ministry of National Defense (Menghe)|MoND]], prepare this list through internal appointment, while others, like the All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions, conduct a vote-by-mail poll of registered members to determine the ordering. The Patriotic Association of Mothers and Wives fills half of its ranked places through a raffle of participating subscribers to its national magazine.
 
NSCC delegates are encouraged to maintain their full-time jobs or lifestyles while the NSCC is not in session. Formal compensation is relatively low, taking the form of a stipend to cover travel expenses, living expenses in the capital, and the hours worked in July. The requirement to work the rest of the year in full-time jobs also keeps delegates embedded in their social background, as it would defeat the organization's purpose for them to become career politicians. Similarly, while there are no official term limits in the Constitution or the Fundamental Law, organizations are strongly encouraged to rotate out candidates frequently, and most of them do.
 
==Annual operations==
The full NSCC convenes for three weeks in July every year, with members from all over the country gathering in [[Donggyŏng]] at the All-Nation Social Consultative Congress Hall, formerly the Hall of People's Representatives - the legislature of the [[Democratic People's Republic of Menghe]]. By this time, a full year has passed since the delegates were elected, giving them ample time to converse with constituents in their everyday lives or handle local issues at the Prefectural level.


In order to maintain their workforce connections, delegates are expected to remain in their occupations while the NSCC is not in session, and are only paid with an annual stipend for travel expenses. Since 2014, they have been permitted to partner with government assistants to handle requests from constituents, but they are not allowed to hire full-time staff of their own.
After the opening ceremony, delegates listen to prepared reports by the Chairs of each of Menghe's Provincial SCCs. These groups, which operate very much like the NSCC in terms of their annual routine, spent most of their recent meetings aggregating reports from the individual Prefectures and Municipalities. Provincial SCC chairs are sometimes NSCC members, though this is not always the case; where the two don't overlap, Provincial SCC chairs are brought in as non-voting auxiliary members.


==Lower levels==
Delegates then hold discussions on the major social and economic issues facing the country and present the stances of their respective social groups. With 2,918 delegates, the NSCC does not lend itself well to organized debate, so designated leaders for each interest group do much of the talking in full sessions and the remainder of the work is carried out in smaller issue-based committees.
The structure of the NSCC is replicated, with modifications, at each [[Administrative divisions of Menghe|administrative level of Menghe]].


At the Village and County levels, Social Consultative Conference representatives are popularly elected; each voter can list as many names as there are seats in the district, generally 3-5. Candidates are nominated by the general population if they can gather twenty signatures, but they must be approved by the local Electoral Commission to approve on the ballot, a process which screens out potential "troublemakers."
At the end of each session, the NSCC drafts an advisory report which identifies latent social issues and presents broad policy recommendations, or at least the official stances of social groups on how to best proceed. On or around July 21st, the NSCC releases its official report to the [[National Assembly (Menghe)|National Assembly]], the [[Supreme Council of Menghe|Supreme Council]], and the press. The timing of this release ensures that when the new legislative year begins on August 1st, representatives are presented with a ready-made list of issues to consider.


After elections are over, village SCCs convene once a month, and county SCCs convene four times a year. At these levels, there are no formal requirements on class background, though Electoral Commissions may adjust the screening process to ensure an adequate distribution of class voices. Village and County Consultative Conference meetings sometimes discuss labor and economic issues, especially during development initiatives or periods of labor unrest, but for the most part agenda-setting stresses issues of interest to the whole community.
==Lower levels==
{{see|Social Consultative Conferences}}


At the Prefectural and Provincial levels, most representatives are indirectly elected by the Consultative Conferences at the next level down. Seats may also be reserved for representatives of local trade-union branches or "prominent cultural persons." These conferences set more stringent guidelines on class representation, with loose quotas for each occupation group. Meeting once a year (twice a year in some Metropolitan Cities), they discuss proposals submitted by Village and County governments, and pass on reports to the next level up.
The structure of the NSCC is replicated, with modifications, at each [[Administrative divisions of Menghe|administrative level of Menghe]]. Provincial SCCs meet for three weeks every June, and function in much the same manner as the NSCC, aggregating information from the Chairs of Prefecture-level SCCs and submitting an advisory report to the provincial government. Prefectural SCCs meet once a week, generally on Saturday or Sunday, and their delegates discuss local issues and disputes as they emerge.


The schedules of these different conferences are timed to allow recommendation documents to more easily flow upward: the NSCC convenes in early November, Prefectural and Provincial SCCs in late October, and County SCCs in September, with each discussing selected documents from the earlier level. This delay is also necessary because all representatives selected through indirect election concurrently sit on lower-level conferences. The only exception are village SCCs, which meet year-round every month and can convene on an emergency basis.
Candidates to the NSCC may concurrently appear on ranked lists for Provincial and Prefectural SCCs as well as the NSCC. The National Assembly encourages this practice, as it ensures that NSCC delegates have firsthand experience working with local issues by the time they gather at the national level. To ensure that there are no scheduling conflicts, the NSCC convenes for three weeks in July, the Provincial SCCs convene for three weeks in June, and the Prefectural SCCs are in recess from May to August


==Role==
==Role==
In spite of the NSCC's limited formal power, recent scholarship has identified it as an important institution of "consultative authoritarianism." The bottom-up structure of the SCC system and the requirement of concurrent seats for representatives enable a steady upward flow of information on the public's policy preferences, which are then passed on to national officials with actual policymaking power. In this sense, it serves as an important feedback mechanism, allowing the government to adjust non-critical policies in ways that maximize popular support and monitor the implementation of central policy initiatives.
In spite of the NSCC's very limited lawmaking power, recent scholarship has identified it as an important institution of "consultative authoritarianism." The bottom-up structure of the SCC system, the practice of issuing concurrent seats to delegates, and the requirement that delegates work full-time jobs in their represented career enable a steady upward flow of information on the public's policy preferences, which are then passed on to national officials with actual policymaking power. While local conferences sometimes generate heated arguments over labor rights, national and provincial conferences are carefully regulated to present an image of inter-class harmony, while still alerting government officials to cases of labor unrest and possible solutions. In this sense, the NSCC serves as an important feedback mechanism, allowing the government to adjust non-critical policies in ways that maximize popular support and steadily monitor the implementation of central policy initiatives.


Additionally, the corporatist structure of the NSCC co-opts emerging economic elites by giving them a disproportionately large voice in the system, while also maintaining a protected voice for the lower classes. While local conferences sometimes generate heated arguments over labor rights, national and provincial conferences are carefully regulated to present an image of inter-class harmony, while still alerting government officials to cases of labor unrest and possible solutions.
Additionally, the "social background" structure of the NSCC allows representatives of officially recognized interest groups to discuss mutually agreeable policy solutions in a formal, collegial setting, as an alternative to protest and lobbying. This gives the body a distinctly {{wp|corporatism|corporatist}} character: it is the only legislature in [[Septentrion]] in which all delegates are explicitly organized along class and occupational lines. Notably, the fact that the NSCC is filled through proportional representation means that each interest group has a number of seats directly proportional to its share in the national population, or at least its share of self-identifying voters. This gives labor and agricultural interests a larger voice than the CEOs of [[Jachi-hoesa|large corporations]], who normally enjoy privileged access to bureaucrats and elected Assembly members.


Nevertheless, the NSCC and its local counterparts cannot be considered democratic institutions, as the selection of representatives and the setting of the agenda are overseen by Socialist Party organs. Most SCC debates deal with "everyday" issues such as law enforcement, environmental protection, and development projects; "critical" issues such as freedom of speech and multi-party competition are seldom discussed in Village and County conferences, and almost never passed all the way up to the national level. The SCCs also lack the ability to pass laws, giving unelected Party and Government officials full discretion over how, and whether, their non-binding resolutions should be implemented. In this sense, at most they represent a form of "bounded representation," designed to support the regime's popularity without substantively changing its authoritarian nature.
Nevertheless, the NSCC and its local counterparts cannot be considered democratic institutions, as the selection of representatives and the setting of the agenda are overseen by Socialist Party organs. Most SCC debates deal with "everyday" issues such as law enforcement, environmental protection, and labor rights; "critical" issues such as freedom of speech and multi-party competition are seldom discussed in Prefectural meetings, and almost always filtered out before they reach the national level. The SCCs also lack the ability to pass laws, giving unelected Party and Government officials full discretion over how, and whether, their non-binding resolutions should be implemented. In this sense, at most they represent a form of "bounded representation," designed to support the regime's popularity without substantively changing its authoritarian nature.


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 18:57, 30 June 2020

The All-Nation Social Consultative Assembly Hall, used by the NSCC during its annual session.

The National Social Consultative Conference (Gomun: 全國社會協議會, Sinmun: 전국 사회 협의회, pr. Jŏnguk Sahoe Hyŏbyihoe), also translated "All-Nation Social Consultative Conference" and usually abbreviated NSCC in official English translations, is a political advisory body in the Socialist Republic of Menghe. It forms the head of a chain of Social Consultative Conferences, which also exist at the Provincial and Prefectural levels.

In place of political parties, representatives to the NSCC are broken up into fourteen "social backgrounds," each corresponding to a given occupation or field. Voters cast ballots by identifying the social background that they most identify with, and seats are filled through proportional representation with umbrella interest organizations serving as parties. This gives the body a distinctively corporatist character, with proportional elected representatives of labor, business, military, and other social interests.

In contrast to the National Assembly, the NSCC is not a formal legislative body and lacks the power to draft or pass laws. It also convenes just once a year, for three weeks in July, to hear reports drafted by the Provincial SCCs and compile a non-binding advisory resolution which is then passed on to the National Assembly and Supreme Council. In light of this limited role, some scholars have referred to the NSCC as a "quasi-legislature."

History

The first round of so-called "Social Consultative Conferences" were held in May 1993, after Choe Sŭng-min issued a proclamation encouraging prefecture-level governments to organize "Five-Class meetings" with representatives for laborers, farmers, professionals, petty entrepreneurs, and state-owned enterprises. The vaguely worded document did not lay down any guidelines about the selection of representatives, nor did it provide for a national-level parent body.

The SCCs were legally formalized in February of 1998, when the National Assembly drafted the Foundational Law on Social Consultative Conferences and enshrined this document in the 1989 Constitution by amendment. In addition to converting the Prefectural SCCs into formal government bodies, the Fundamental Law on SCCs established Provincial and National Social Consultative Conferences, the first sessions of which would convene that summer through special indirect elections. Subsequent sessions of the NSCC and its lower-level counterparts were filled through the election process spelled out in the Fundamental Law.

Initially, the NSCC was a "window dressing institution" with little policy influence. Its first few sessions, which took place during the Disciplined Society Campaign, heaped praise on Choe Sŭng-min and expressed a unified commitment to economic cooperation, even as the 1999 Menghean financial crisis shook the economy. Over time, however, the NSCC grew more assertive in raising sensitive policy issues, such as environmental protection, labor rights, and gender equality. The 29th National Social Consultative Conference, held in July 2017, called for the relaxation or abolition of the Household Registration System, a contentious issue in light of Menghe's large population of internal migrants.

Represented social backgrounds

Every year, the National Assembly compiles a list of "social backgrounds" or corporate interest groups which will be represented in the coming SCC elections. The list generally remains the same from year to year, with the occasional addition of new interest groups, if they are deemed large and significant enough to merit national attention. The "women outside the labor force" category was added in 2001, and the "university students" category in 2012.

Each social background is matched with a single officially recognized nationwide umbrella organization representing the interests of its members. A few of these bodies, like the MoND's Social Consultation Directorate, are attached to government bodies, but the rest are formally non-government organizations. Even so, they are not fully independent of the regime, as all have a high density of Socialist Party members among their top-level staff and maintain built-in Party Committees for ideological guidance. The All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions, for example, is much less militant than national labor unions in other countries, and generally encourages joint negotiation with management over strikes and protests.

Listed Interest Groups in the 2019 SCC Elections
# Social background Umbrella Organization
1 Socialist Party cadres SCC Bureau of the Menghean Socialist Party
2 Military officers and personnel Social Consultation Directorate of the MoND
3 Police and security personnel Social Consultation Directorate of the MIS
4 Large entrepreneurs and management Commission for Prosperity
5 Small business owners and self-employed National Small Enterprise Association
6 Skilled workers and professionals National Union of Skilled Workers
7 Artists, writers, musicians, and cultural figures National Artists' Association
8 University students National Higher Education Association
9 Industrial, construction, and other blue-collar workers All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions
10 Unskilled or semiskilled service employees All-Menghe Service Workers' Union
11 Agricultural workers Menghean Agriculture Organization
12 Fishermen, sailors, and nautical workers Organization of Nautical Labor
13 Pensioners National Association of Retired Persons
14 Women outside the labor force Patriotic Association of Mothers and Wives

Delegates

The allocation of seats in the NSCC follows the same general scheme as that used for the National Assembly. Each of Menghe's provinces, including the four directly-governed city, is treated as a single multi-member district, and seats within that unit are distributed to the different interest groups proportional to their vote share. Compared with Provincial and Prefectural SCC elections, the procedure for dividing up the "remainder" in each vote group - the votes left over once the largest number of whole-number seats is deducted from each - is slightly different, and is designed to ensure that the number of seats allocated to each group nationally matches up with its nationwide vote share.

Once all seats are allocated, each interest group fills them using a pre-prepared ranked list of candidates, functionally similar to a party list. The Fundamental Law on SCCs allows a formally designated umbrella organization for each interest group to determine its own procedure for assembling a candidate list. Some, like the Social Consultation Directorate of the MoND, prepare this list through internal appointment, while others, like the All-Menghe Federation of Labor Unions, conduct a vote-by-mail poll of registered members to determine the ordering. The Patriotic Association of Mothers and Wives fills half of its ranked places through a raffle of participating subscribers to its national magazine.

NSCC delegates are encouraged to maintain their full-time jobs or lifestyles while the NSCC is not in session. Formal compensation is relatively low, taking the form of a stipend to cover travel expenses, living expenses in the capital, and the hours worked in July. The requirement to work the rest of the year in full-time jobs also keeps delegates embedded in their social background, as it would defeat the organization's purpose for them to become career politicians. Similarly, while there are no official term limits in the Constitution or the Fundamental Law, organizations are strongly encouraged to rotate out candidates frequently, and most of them do.

Annual operations

The full NSCC convenes for three weeks in July every year, with members from all over the country gathering in Donggyŏng at the All-Nation Social Consultative Congress Hall, formerly the Hall of People's Representatives - the legislature of the Democratic People's Republic of Menghe. By this time, a full year has passed since the delegates were elected, giving them ample time to converse with constituents in their everyday lives or handle local issues at the Prefectural level.

After the opening ceremony, delegates listen to prepared reports by the Chairs of each of Menghe's Provincial SCCs. These groups, which operate very much like the NSCC in terms of their annual routine, spent most of their recent meetings aggregating reports from the individual Prefectures and Municipalities. Provincial SCC chairs are sometimes NSCC members, though this is not always the case; where the two don't overlap, Provincial SCC chairs are brought in as non-voting auxiliary members.

Delegates then hold discussions on the major social and economic issues facing the country and present the stances of their respective social groups. With 2,918 delegates, the NSCC does not lend itself well to organized debate, so designated leaders for each interest group do much of the talking in full sessions and the remainder of the work is carried out in smaller issue-based committees.

At the end of each session, the NSCC drafts an advisory report which identifies latent social issues and presents broad policy recommendations, or at least the official stances of social groups on how to best proceed. On or around July 21st, the NSCC releases its official report to the National Assembly, the Supreme Council, and the press. The timing of this release ensures that when the new legislative year begins on August 1st, representatives are presented with a ready-made list of issues to consider.

Lower levels

The structure of the NSCC is replicated, with modifications, at each administrative level of Menghe. Provincial SCCs meet for three weeks every June, and function in much the same manner as the NSCC, aggregating information from the Chairs of Prefecture-level SCCs and submitting an advisory report to the provincial government. Prefectural SCCs meet once a week, generally on Saturday or Sunday, and their delegates discuss local issues and disputes as they emerge.

Candidates to the NSCC may concurrently appear on ranked lists for Provincial and Prefectural SCCs as well as the NSCC. The National Assembly encourages this practice, as it ensures that NSCC delegates have firsthand experience working with local issues by the time they gather at the national level. To ensure that there are no scheduling conflicts, the NSCC convenes for three weeks in July, the Provincial SCCs convene for three weeks in June, and the Prefectural SCCs are in recess from May to August

Role

In spite of the NSCC's very limited lawmaking power, recent scholarship has identified it as an important institution of "consultative authoritarianism." The bottom-up structure of the SCC system, the practice of issuing concurrent seats to delegates, and the requirement that delegates work full-time jobs in their represented career enable a steady upward flow of information on the public's policy preferences, which are then passed on to national officials with actual policymaking power. While local conferences sometimes generate heated arguments over labor rights, national and provincial conferences are carefully regulated to present an image of inter-class harmony, while still alerting government officials to cases of labor unrest and possible solutions. In this sense, the NSCC serves as an important feedback mechanism, allowing the government to adjust non-critical policies in ways that maximize popular support and steadily monitor the implementation of central policy initiatives.

Additionally, the "social background" structure of the NSCC allows representatives of officially recognized interest groups to discuss mutually agreeable policy solutions in a formal, collegial setting, as an alternative to protest and lobbying. This gives the body a distinctly corporatist character: it is the only legislature in Septentrion in which all delegates are explicitly organized along class and occupational lines. Notably, the fact that the NSCC is filled through proportional representation means that each interest group has a number of seats directly proportional to its share in the national population, or at least its share of self-identifying voters. This gives labor and agricultural interests a larger voice than the CEOs of large corporations, who normally enjoy privileged access to bureaucrats and elected Assembly members.

Nevertheless, the NSCC and its local counterparts cannot be considered democratic institutions, as the selection of representatives and the setting of the agenda are overseen by Socialist Party organs. Most SCC debates deal with "everyday" issues such as law enforcement, environmental protection, and labor rights; "critical" issues such as freedom of speech and multi-party competition are seldom discussed in Prefectural meetings, and almost always filtered out before they reach the national level. The SCCs also lack the ability to pass laws, giving unelected Party and Government officials full discretion over how, and whether, their non-binding resolutions should be implemented. In this sense, at most they represent a form of "bounded representation," designed to support the regime's popularity without substantively changing its authoritarian nature.

See also