Federation Council (Fratanica)

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Federation Council
Type
Type
Upper House
of the National Diet
History
FoundedOctober 6, 1941 (1941-10-06)
Preceded byNational Parliament
New session started
January 1, 2021 (2021-01-01)
Leadership
Chairman of the Federation Council
Sara Jacquot, Liberal Unity Party
since March 14, 2021 (2021-03-14)
Opposition Coalition Leader
Ames Moulin, Fratanica Forward Party
since June 22, 2020 (2020-06-22)
Structure
Seats62
Length of term
6 years, 2 term limit
Elections
First election
March 6, 1942 (1942-03-06)
Constitution
Constitution of Fratanica

The Federation Council is the upper house of the National Diet of Fratanica, which represents the 14 administrative provinces, as well as the capital city and two non-autonomous, overseas territories. There are 62 seats indirectly elected by provincial legislators, meant to represent the interests of these provinces. Each province, plus the self-autonomous city of Viras, may elect 4 representatives to the Federation Council. Members of the Federation Council serve 6-year terms, with a 2-term limit.

As the upper house, the Federation Council partakes in legislation involving provincial affairs or constitutional affairs. Legislation involving itself is also within the Federation Council's jurisdiction. A supermajority of 2/3 is required for each piece of legislation to pass, meaning that at least 22 votes are required for the passage of a bill.

History

Powers

The Federation Council's main purpose is to vote on constitutional amendments and legislation affecting provincial power. The representatives from each province often vote on legislation in groups, deferring to their provincial governments. However, each member can stray away from their province's stance on a piece of legislation, known as faithless representation. However, this is exceedingly rare because provincial legislatures can vote to remove a representative, and replace it with a new one.

Composition

Criticism

Critics claim that the Federation Council's lack of power in the legislative process damages the power of the various provinces in the country. Some believe this undermines the principle of federalism, by reducing provincial and local influence on state matters.

Some also criticize the composition of the Federation Council due to its lack of consideration of a province's population. Roberto Arrielo, a prominent political science professor at Viras National University, has claimed that the Federation Council's ignorance of population "[creates] an imbalance in which lesser populated populations gain a massive amount of power, thereby undercutting our idealistic democracy". Constitutional amendments had been proposed a few times (1965, 1988, 2003, 2010, 2018), however, these amendments had not been able to gain enough popularity amongst the various administrative divisions. The closest attempt was in 2010, when the National Assembly approved the constitutional amendment, but it was subsequently rejected by the Federation Council; only a simple majority had been amassed.