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Parliament of the Commonwealth

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Parliament of the
Commonwealth
Parliament of the Commonwealth Logo.png
Type
Type
HousesCommonwealth Senate
Commonwealth Assembly
Term limits
10 Years
History
FoundedJune 1619, 399 years ago
Preceded byAssembly of Tianlong Nations
New session started
November 2012
Leadership
Speaker of the Assembly
Forte Attley, Labor
since 2012 Legislative Election
Speaker of the Senate
Laars Fjordrekson, Labor
since 2012 Legislative Election
Structure
Commonwealth Assembly.svg
Assembly political groups
520 Seats

Government (269)

  •   PPA (195)
  •   GRN (74)

Opposition (243)

  •   CPC (161)
  •   GCA (51)
  •   FTA (20)
  •   ILC (11)

Crossbench (8)

  •   ECO (2)
  •   NAT (2)
  •   IDT (4)
Commonwealth Senate.svg
Senate political groups
100 Seats

Government (40)

  •   PPA (26)
  •   GRN (14)

Opposition (35)

  •   CPC (21)
  •   GCA (8)
  •   FTA (4)
  •   ILC (2)

Crossbench (25)

  •   ECO (5)
  •   NAT (4)
  •   IDT (5)
  •   ISO (2)
  •   LIB (1)
  •   COM (2)
  •   CNY (1)
  •   EQY (2)
  •   WRK (1)
  •   MEP (1)
  •   PIO (1)
Elections
Assembly voting system
Instant-Runoff Voting
Single Transferable Vote
Constitution
Articles of Confederation

The Parliament of the Commonwealth, commonly known as the Commonwealth Parliament is the supreme legislative body within the Commonwealth of Tianlong and its extra-solar territories. All other political bodies within the Commonwealth, with the exception of the executive, judicial bodies, ultimately answer to the Commonwealth Parliament. Its head is the Chancellor of the Commonwealth, its seat is at Domain Interchange at Parliament Square within Fortem, the capital city of the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth Parliament is a bicameral parliament and is comprised of two houses: the Commonwealth Assembly and the Commonwealth Senate. The Parliament of the Commonwealth is based on a unique hybrid parliamentarian system. It combines some aspects of the Westminster model of a lower house with the United States Congress model of an upper house. The Commonwealth Assembly is the lower house and proposes legislation to the upper house to be approved and ratified and monitors the government. The Commonwealth Senate is the upper house, is proportionally elected and is vested with significant powers as it has the capacity to either pass or block legislation put forward by the Chancellor and the Commonwealth Assembly.

Membership within the Commonwealth Assembly & Senate represents all fifteen member states of the Aldian System, its extra-solar territories and space habitats. The Commonwealth Senate consists of 100 members while Commonwealth Assembly consists of 520 seats. Politics within the Commonwealth Assembly has historically been dominated by major two alliances: the center-left Progressive People's Alliance and the center-right Conservative People's Coalition. This balance however has been changed since the 2012 election when it saw the rise of two new alliances: the eco-centric Greens & the adiasceptic Commonwealth Reform Pact. Elections take place once every ten years which allows governments to adopt a more long-term approach towards strategic planning & policy making. The Progressive Peoples Alliance has been in government since the 1873 Presidential & Legislative Elections, having removed the Conservatives after more than fifty years in power.

As noted, the Commonwealth Senate is vested with significantly higher powers as it possess the ability to block passage of a bill proposed by either the lower house or Chancellor. In the event that a bill that has been passed by the Assembly is blocked twice by the Senate, then the Speaker of the Assembly may advise the President of the Commonwealth for a double dissolution. This act will dissolve one or both the Commonwealth Assembly & Senate, bringing forward a snap election. If after a double dissolution the same bill still cannot be approved by both houses then the President will convene for a joint sitting of both houses where the bill, or bills, and any of its amendments will be considered by both houses. As its name suggests a joint siting is when members of both houses of the Commonwealth Parliament sit together as one legislative body to consider and/or deliberate a bill or bills. A joint sitting is a very rare occasion and has only occurred once.