National Legislative Council (Talahara)

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Supreme Legislative Council

ⵉⵙⴰⵡⴰⵍⴰⵡⴰⴽⵔⴰⴷ

Isawalawakrad
Lion's paw sigil.svg
Lion's paw sigil
Type
Type
Unicameral national assembly
of Talahara
History
Founded1841; 183 years ago (1841)
Preceded byCommune Council
Structure
Talahara SLC Diagram.svg
Political groups
  • Community Alliance
  • Unity Group
  • Young Workers Movement
  • Green Future Industrial Group
  • Industry First
  • Akli-Werner-Tsenpo Clique
Length of term
Four years, no term limits
Elections
Each seat elected from a Superior Legislative Council by instant-runoff
First election
May 23, 1841; 183 years ago (1841-05-23)
Last election
May 23, 2021; 3 years ago (2021-05-23)
Next election
May 23, 2025; 6 months' time (2025-05-23)
RedistrictingEvery twelve years
Meeting place
برلمان المغرب.jpg
Jama'at, Maktarim
Council chamber

The Supreme Legislative Council (Takelat: Isawalawakrad; ⵉⵙⴰⵡⴰⵍⴰⵡⴰⴽⵔⴰⴷ), often referred to as the Supreme Council, is the national legislative body of the Talaharan Commune. Aside from constitutionally-provided authority, most of the Supreme Council's authority is devolved upward from lower councils, where the scale of issues or local resources are insufficient. Key areas over which the Supreme Council has authority to legislate include aspects of education, environmental regulations, healthcare, housing, industrial regulations, legal codes, and national transportation.

The Supreme Council is a unicameral assembly and the final level of Talhara's three-tier nested council system. Members are elected from each of the 50 Superior Legislative Councils, who are respectively elected from 1,250 Local Legislative Councils. Elections to a subsequent level of government are held popularly, utilizing an instant-runoff ballot among candidates in a citizen's council region who self-nominate for the appointment.

Each of the 50 members of the Supreme Council represents approximately one million citizens. Following the Fourth Amendmendment of Part III of the Constitution of Talahara in 2008, additional seats may be added in future redistricting to allow for approximate representation of one million citizens per seat. It is expected that the 2025 redistricting process will see the Supreme Council grow from 50 to 52 or 53 seats.

History

Composition and elections

Powers

See also