Congress of States
Congress of States Sāmjitōḫ | |
---|---|
15th congress of Tarinθikluu̯ī VI | |
Type | |
Type | Bicameral legislature of Northern States |
Houses | House of Prelates House of Representatives |
History | |
Founded | February 20, 614 |
Leadership | |
President of the Congress | TBD, Progressive Party |
Speaker of the House of Representatives | TBD, Green Party |
Seats | 57 471 |
Meeting place | |
Congress Hill |
The Congress of States (Northian: Sāmjitōḫ; Dutch: Congres van Staten; often abbr. the Congress) is the bicameral federal legislature of the Northern States. It meets in quarterly sessions in the capital city of Cleiden. The Congress operates under the terms of the Instrument of 894 and its subsequent amendments, defining its powers apart from those of the constituent states. According to the terms of these documents, the Congress defray public expenses upon the states, declare war and peace, and legislate on other issues of common relevance. Both houses must assent to the same bill before it becomes a statute.
The legislature consists of two chambers, the higher house the House of Prelates, and the other the House of Representatives. The House of Prelates consists of two classes of members, the 33 civil prelacies and 24 free prelacies; the civil prelacies are those selected by the civil (i.e. state) authority and are thus always entitled to a seat in the house, and the free prelacies are those who are elevated to the status of a prelate by mere royal command, which expires at the death or resignation of the holder. After 1810, congressional prelates do not need to be members of the clergy despite the name of the house. The House of Prelates also functions as the apex court of DNS.
The House of Representatives consists of 471 representatives elected every three years proportionally from the entire Northern States. Due to the principle of responsible government, the Federal Government is accountable to the House of Representatives in modern politics, which means the lower house has more political influence than the upper house. By custom, all budgetary measures are introduced lower house