Federal Parliament of Vonzumier

Revision as of 18:11, 3 December 2020 by District (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Federal Parliament

Föderale Parlament
Type
Type
HousesSenate
House of Deputies
Term limits
Max 15 years; nonrenewable (Senate)
5 years; renewable thrice (HoD)
History
Founded10 June 1871
Preceded byNational Congress
Leadership
Fabian Vittel, Constitutionalist
since 15 July 2016
Albert Brodmann, Constitutionalist
since 15 July 2016
Seats568 voting members
  • 91 senators
  • 477 deputies
Vonzumier HoD 2016.svg
House of Deputies political groups
Government
  Constitutionalist (198)

Confidence and supply (57)
  Social Union (34)
  Alliance 21 (23)

Opposition (197)
  Labour (102)
  Democratic (59)
  Civic Revival (31)
  Socialist Workers (25)
  Environment (5)
Elections
House of Deputies last election
1 July 2016
House of Deputies next election
2 July 2021

The Federal Parliament (Vierz: Föderale Parlament) is the bicameral national legislature of Vonzumier. Both houses, the Senate and the House of Deputies, are constituted on the basis of proportional representation with states having more or less representation on the basis of their population size. The upper house, the Senate, is composed of 91 senators who serve at the pleasure of state legislatures for a maximum of 15 years, with no set term lengths. The lower house, the House of Deputies, has 477 members who are directly elected by the population every five years near-concurrently with presidential elections. While the Senate is considered the more "elite" of the two bodies, functionally it lacks power and serves as more of an advisory role to the President of Vonzumier, with most legislative power lying in the House of Deputies.

The body was founded on 10 June 1871 after the conclusion of the Vonzumier War of Independence as a successor to the wartime Vonzumier National Congress. The Federal Parliament is responsible for drafting federal legislation, as well as selecting the Chancellor, the country's head of government within the semi-presidential system. Due to the simultaneous nature of the presidential and legislative elections, the President and Chancellor are usually members of the same party, or are ideological allies.