Parliament of Gristol-Serkonos

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Parlamentum

Stortinget
Kanonhséshne
50th Parliament
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Gsparliamentlogo.png
Logo
Type
Type
HousesCouncil of the State
Council of Representatives
History
FoundedJuly 1, 1867 (1867-07-01)
Preceded byDiet of Gristol
Longhouse of Serkonos
Leadership
Monarch of Gristol
Anna
Monarch of Serkonos
Tehwehron
Lord Speaker of the Council of the State
TBD, (Conservative)
since 2019
Lord Speaker of the Council of Representatives
TBD, (Conservative)
since 2019
Kaniehtí:io Fox, (Conservative)
since 2019
Structure
Seats1010
200 Hereditary and Elected Senators
810 Members of Parliament
Current Structure of the Council of the State
Council of the State political groups
Hereditary Senators
  Gristol Senators: 20
  Serkonan Senators: 20

Elected Senators

Government
  PC: 63
Confidence and Supply
  PPF: 8
  NC: 7
  DU: 9
Opposition
  SDP: 54
  ML: 18
  DS: 7
  GN: 8
Absentionist
  IG: 9
Current Structure of the Council of Representatives
Council of Representatives political groups
Government
  PC: 322

Confidence and Supply

  PPF: 31
  DU: 31
  NC: 17

Official Opposition

  SDP: 248

Other Opposition

  ML: 97
  DS: 25
  GN: 18

Absentionist

  IG: 21
Elections
Council of the State voting system
  • Appointed by the monarchs (Hereditary Senators, 40 seats)
  • Appointed by the monarchs on the advise off the Chancellor. (Elected Senators, 180 seats)
Council of Representatives voting system
Parallel Voting:
  • First past the post (626 seats)
  • Additional member system (184 seats)
Council of Representatives last election
2023
Council of Representatives next election
2027
Meeting place
PalaceofthePeopleGS.png
Palace of the People, Federal Government District, Pontiac-Bernadotte

The Parliament of Gristol-Serkonos (Latin: Parlamentum, Nordic: Stortinget, Kanienʼkéha: Kanonhséshne) is the bicameral federal legislature of the United Kingdom of Gristol-Serkonos. The body consists of the Gristol and Serkonan monarchs, who make up the Federal Crowns, an upper house, the Council of the State; and a lower house, the Council of Representatives. Under the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, the Parliament holds the ultimate power over all other political bodies in Gristol-Serkonos. The two chambers meet at the Palace of the People in Pontiac-Bernadotte, the national capital.

Each element has its own officers and organization. By convention, the Council of Representatives hold parliamentary dominance, with the Council of the State rarely opposing its will. The Council of the State reviews legislation from a less partisan standpoint and the monarch or viceroy provides royal assent to make bills into law.

The Council of the State includes two types of senators. There are 40 Hereditary Senators are appointed by the Federal Crowns which represents the hereditary Tribal Chiefs in Serkonos and the lesser Lords of the Manor Lands in Gristol. Second, is the 160 Elected Senators who are appointed by the party leaders from the Council of Representatives based on their seats. The Council of Representatives is an elected chamber with elections to 810 single member constituencies held at least every four years under the first-past-the-post system for 626 local area representatives while the remaining 184 members are elected through proportional representation based on their national vote. General elections must be called by the monarchs either by the advice of the Chancellor or if the government loses a confidence vote in the House. All government ministers, including the prime minister, are members of the Council of Representatives, less commonly, the Senators from the Council of the State and are thereby accountable to the respective branches of the legislature. Most cabinet ministers are from the Council of Representatives, whilst junior ministers can be from either house.

In theory, the supreme legislative power in Gristol-Serkonos is officially vested in the Crown-in-Parliament. However, the Federal Crowns normally acts on the advice of the Chancellor, and the powers of the Council of the State are limited to only delaying legislation; thus power is de facto vested in the Council of Representatives. The most recent Parliament, summoned by Queen Anna of Gristol and Grand Duke Tehwehron of Serkonos in 2023, is the 50th since Union.

Composition

The body consists of the Gristo-Serkonan Federal Monarchs; an upper house, the Council of the State; and a lower house, the Council of Representatives. Each elements has its own officers and organization. Each has their own distinct role, but works in conjuction within the legislative process. Only those who sit in the Council of Representatives are granted the title of Member of Parliament. Though legislatively less powerful, Senators are ranked higher in the national order of precedence. No individual may serve in more than one chamber at the time.

Monarchs

Council of the State

Council of Representatives

See also: List of political parties in Gristol-Serkonos

Jurisdiction

Powers of the Parliament of Gristol-Serkonos are limited by the Federal Constitution. The legislative powers are divided between the federal and legislatures of the Constituent Countries. In general, legislatures of the Constituent Countries are granted powers to pass legislation relating to topics explicitly reserves for them in the constitution such as education, provincial officers, municipal government, charitable institutions, and "matters of a merely local or private nature".

Matters not under the exclusive authority of the Constituent Countries are within the scope of the federal Parliament's power. The Federal Parliament alone can pass laws relating to, among other things, the postal service, census, military, navigation and shipping, fishing, currency, banking, weights and measures, bankruptcy, copyrights, patents, and naturalization.

Jurisdictions of the federal and legislatures of the Constituent Countries in certain areas may be vague. For instance, the federal parliament regulates marriage and divorce in general, but the solemnization of marriage is regulated only by the legislatures of the Constituent Countries. Other examples include the powers of both the federal and the legislatures of the Constituent Countries to impose taxes, borrow money, punish crimes, and regulate agriculture.

Officers

Standing Committees

The Gristo-Serkonan Parliament has 43 standing committees, with 23 committees in the Council of Representatives, 16 in the Council of the State, and three joint committees. These committees are established by Standing Orders of the Council of Representatives or the Council of the State. These committees have many particular responsibilities to examine the administration, policy development, and budgetary estimates of certain government departments and agencies.

Council of Representatives Standing Committee Committee Chair Council of the State Standing Committee Committee Chair Joint Standing Committee Joint Committee Chairs
Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics Éloïse Duval, MP (SDA) Agriculture and Forestry Sen. Hélier Dufour (PC) National Security and Intelligence Oversight Sen. Kahenrahtiio Hemlock (SDA)
Konrad Storstrand, MP (PC)
Agriculture and Agri-Food Ruth Rasmussen, MP (PC) Banking, Trade, and Commerce Sen. Hristofor Nogueira (SDA) Library of Parliament Sen. Hrœrekr Devlin (SDA)
Atená:ti Luke, MP (PC)
Heritage and Culture Yoshi Okamoto, MP (PC) Ethics and Conflict of Interest for Senators Sen. Iostha Pratt (SDA) Scrutiny Regulations Sen. Kawennitake Deere (SDA)
Alix Samuel, MP (PC)
Citizenship and Immigration Léonide Adam, MP (PC) Energy, the Environment and Natural Resources Sen. Harper Spalding (PC)
Environment and Sustainable Development Raleigh Belcher, MP (PC) Fisheries and Oceans Sen. Loreto Matos (PC)
Finance Aemilius Claudius, MP (PC) Foreign Affairs and International Trade Sen. Natalia Papadimitriou (PC)
Fisheries and Oceans Andreas Kontos, MP (PC) Human Rights Sen. Estève Fabre (PC)
Foreign Affairs and International Development Loís Soler, MP (PC) Internal Economy, Budgets, and Administration Sen. Johan Akselsen (SDA)
Government Operations and Estimates Frans Antonsen, MP (SDA) Legal and Constitutional Affairs Sen. Shawátis Jacobs (SDA)
Human Resources, Skills and Social Development
and the Status of Persons with Disabilities
Tá:wit Horn, MP (PC) National Finance Sen. Terés Raven (PC)
Industry, Science and Technology Tier Davidson, MP (PC) National Security and Defence Sen. Teioshontathe McGregor (SDA)
International Trade Ojistah Doreen, MP (PC) Official Languages Sen. Iain Phillips (PC)
Constituent Countries and Devolved Administrations Irénée Villeneuve, MP Rules, Procedure and the Rights of Parliament Sen. Linus Naess (PC)
Justice and Human Rights Alex Aartsen, MP (PC) Selection Committee Sen. Mick Van Antwerpen (SDA)
National Defence Lambert Cousineau, MP (SDA) Social Affairs, Science and Technology Sen. Athanase Traverse (PC)
Natural Resources Vilhelm Martinsen, MP (PC) Transport and Communications Sen. Severin Baardsen (PC)
Official Languages Tor Lind, MP (PC)
Procedure and Chamber Affairs Harald Lunde, MP (PC)
Public Accounts Edmundo Belmonte, MP (SDA)
Public Safety and National Security Bjørnar Hanssen, MP (PC)
Status of Women Finn Albertsen, MP (SDA)
Transport, Infrastructure and Communities Yngve Holt, MP (PC)
Veterans Affairs Céleste Carpentier, MP (PC)

Term

Procedure and Legislative Functions

Historical Composition

  Progressive Conservative Party of Gristol-Serkonos
  Social Democratic Party of Gristol-Serkonos
  Moderate Left
  Patriotic People's Front
  Democratic Unionists
  Democratic Socialists
  Green Party
  National Coalition
  Independent Group
  Socialist Front
1921
181
1925
181
1926
181
1930
181
1938
181
1942
181
1946
181
1950
181
1953
181
1956
181
1960
181
1964
181
1968
181
1972
181
1976
181
1978
181
1984
181
1986
181
1990
181
1994
181
1996
196
2000
210
2004
214
2006
65 73 203 65 73 41 309 48 43 17 11
2008
291
2011
271
2015
54 21 251 41 259 80 65 16 23
2019
14 10 451 9 271 14 6 3 15
2023
31 17 322 31 248 97 25 25 21

Council of the State

Last Election