National Assembly of Carloso: Difference between revisions
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| house_type = Unicameral | | house_type = Unicameral | ||
| houses = National Assembly | | houses = National Assembly | ||
| leader1_type = | | leader1_type = Speaker | ||
| leader1 = Jorge Moran | | leader1 = Jorge Moran | ||
| election1 = 11 February 2011 | | election1 = 11 February 2011 | ||
| leader2_type = Deputy | | leader2_type = Deputy Speaker | ||
| leader2 = Tomás Ocanas | | leader2 = Tomás Ocanas | ||
| party2 = [[National Salvation (Carloso)|National Salvation]] | | party2 = [[National Salvation (Carloso)|National Salvation]] |
Revision as of 02:00, 8 January 2023
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National Assembly of the Federal Republic of Carloso | |
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44th National Assembly of Carloso | |
Type | |
Type | |
Houses | National Assembly |
Leadership | |
Speaker | Jorge Moran since 11 February 2011 |
Deputy Speaker | Tomás Ocanas, National Salvation since 23 January 2017 |
Government Chief Whip | Noel Sabater, National Salvation since 5 July 2021 |
Leader of the Opposition | Mariah Contreras, Socialist Republicans since 11 February 2021 |
Opposition Chief Whip | |
Structure | |
Seats | 859 430 (or 429 plus the Presiding Officer) for a majority |
Political groups | Government (506)
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Elections | |
Single transferable vote with elimination transfers only (STV-ETO) | |
Last election | 11 November 2020 |
Next election | 11 November 2025 |
Redistricting | Confirmation by the President on the advice of the boundary commissions. |
Meeting place | |
Monrentera Palace, Madrigal, Carloso |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of the Federal Republic of Carloso |
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Related topics
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The National Assembly of Carloso (Spanish: Asamblea Nacional de Cárloso) is the unicameral legislature of Carloso. While its current form dates to the enactment of the new Constitution of Carloso in 1956, the National Assembly itself can be traced back to independence in 1581. Historically, the Carlosian Parliament was divided between the House of Commons and the House of Lords; later the National Assembly and Senate in the Republican period, however the 1956 constitution abolished the upper house and replaced them and with a unicameral National Assembly.
The last general election in Carloso was held in 2020. The next will be held in 2025.
A member of the National Assembly is called a National Assemblyman (NA). The term National Assemblywoman can be used if the individual is female.
Etymology
History
Imperial Carloso
Republic
Federal Republic
Elections
Constituencies
Single transferable vote
The system of the single transferable vote with elimination transfers only (STV-ETO) often penalises parties who field popular candidates in a constituency, as if their votes exceed the quota and they are elected, any surplus votes beyond that quota cannot be redistributed to other candidates running under that party. This resulted in the largely three-party system (Conservative, Democratic, Socialist Republican) that dominated Carlosian politics up until relatively recently. There is a fierce tradition in Carlosian politics of transfer pacts and complex political strategy in almost every constituency. If a party wishes to run two candidates in a constituency, posters and other election literature will direct voters to vote for a particular candidate depending on their geographic location. As such, the strength and discipline of the grassroots are vital to electoral success.
Carloso uses the Hare quota method.
Composition
Party | Ideology | Position | Leader | Seats | |
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National Salvation | National conservatism | Right-wing | Cárlos Tobón | 507 / 859
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Conservative Party | Liberal conservatism | Centre-right | Ferdinand Casares | 183 / 859
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Democratic Party | Liberalism | Centre-left | Elon Básaran | 68 / 859
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Socialist Republicans | Democratic socialism | Left-wing | Mariah Contreras | 30 / 859
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Synarchist Union | Neo-fascism | Far-right | Damián Torrero | 24 / 859
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Communist Party | Marxism-Leninism | Far-left | Tómas Batias | 18 / 859
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Independent | N/A | N/A | N/A | 29 / 859
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2000–2005 |
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2005–2010 |
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2010–2015 |
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2015–2020 |
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2020–2025 |
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