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Congress of the Union

The Congress of the Union (Spanish: Congreso de la Unión, pronounced [koŋˈɡɾeso ðe lawˈnjon]), formally known as the General Congress of the United Mexican States (Congreso General de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos), is the legislature of the federal government of Mexico consisting of two chambers: the Senate of the Republic and the Chamber of Deputies. Its 628 members (128 senators and 500 deputies) meet in Mexico City.

General Congress of the
United Mexican States

Congreso General de los
Estados Unidos Mexicanos
LXV Legislature
Type
Type
HousesSenate of the Republic
Chamber of Deputies
History
Founded28 September 1821 (1821-09-28)
Leadership
Ana Lilia Rivera (MORENA)
since 1 September 2023 (2023-09-01)
Marcela Guerra Castillo (PRI)
since 1 September 2023 (2023-09-01)
Structure
Seats628
(500 Deputies)
(128 Senators)
Senate political groups
Government (70)
  •   MORENA (58)
  •   PVEM (7)
  •   PT (5)

Opposition (55)

Chamber of Deputies political groups
Government (276)

Opposition (221)

AuthorityTitle III, Chapter II of the
Political Constitution of the United Mexican States
Salary$500,000 pesos (Senator)[1][2]
$150,139 pesos (Deputy)[3][4]
Elections
Last Senate election
1 July 2018 (2018-07-01)
Last Chamber of Deputies election
6 June 2021 (2021-06-06)
Next Senate election
2 June 2024 (2024-06-02)
Next Chamber of Deputies election
2 June 2024 (2024-06-02)
Motto
La Patria Es Primero
(The Fatherland Is First)
Meeting place
Senate Building
Mexico City
San Lázaro Building
Mexico City
Website
Senate website
Chamber of Deputies website
Constitution
Mexican Constitution of 1917
Rules
"Organic Law of the General Congress of the United Mexican States" (Spanish)
Rules for the Interior Government of the General Congress of the United Mexican States" (Spanish)
San Lázaro Building, the Chamber of Deputies, Congress of the Union

Structure edit

The Congress is a bicameral body, consisting of two chambers: The Senate of the Republic and the Chamber of Deputies. Its structure and responsibilities are defined in the Third Title, Second Chapter, Articles 50 to 79 of the 1917 Constitution. The upper chamber is the Senate, "Cámara de Senadores" or "Senado". It comprises 128 seats, 96 members are elected by plurality vote, with 3 members being elected in each State; the other 32 members are elected by proportional representation in a single country-wide constituency. The lower house is the Chamber of Deputies, or "Cámara de Diputados". It has 500 seats; 300 members are elected by plurality vote and the other 200 members are elected according to proportional representation, through a system of regional lists (one for each of the 5 constituencies established for the election by law).

Elections edit

The Congress of the Union (Congreso de la Unión) has two chambers. The Chamber of Deputies (Cámara de Diputados) has 500 members, each elected for a three-year term, 300 of whom are elected in single-seat constituencies by plurality, with the remaining 200 members elected by proportional representation in 5 multi-state, 40-seat constituencies.[5] The 200 PR-seats are distributed generally without taking account the 300 plurality-seats (parallel voting), but since 1996 a party cannot get more seats overall than 8% above its result for the PR-seats (a party must win 42% of the votes for the PR-seats to achieve an overall majority).

There are two exceptions to that rule. A party can lose only PR-seats by that rule (not plurality-seats). Also, a party cannot get more than 300 seats overall (even if it has more than 52% of the votes for the PR-seats).

The Chamber of Senators (Cámara de Senadores) has 128 members, elected for a six-year term, 96 of them in three-seat constituencies (corresponding to the nation's 31 states and Mexico City) and 32 by proportional representation on a nationwide basis.[6] In the state constituencies, two seats are awarded to the plurality winner and one to the first runner-up.

Powers edit

The powers allocated in the Congress are defined in article 73 of the Constitution. Among its powers, the Congress can admit new States into the Union, alter the allocation of powers granted to the federal government, lay and collect taxes, declare war (upon request of the Government), provide for and maintain the Union's armed forces, and coordinate economic activities.

Article 74, 75 and 76 of the Constitution state that each Chamber can address specific matters. In fact, some powers are reserved either to the Chamber of Deputies or to the Chamber of Senators, making the Congress of the union an imperfect bicameralism. For example, the former can approve the federal budget submitted by the Government, while the latter has the power to analyze the foreign policy of the Government, approve or dismiss the Presidential nominations of the Attorney General, Supreme Court Justices, diplomatic agents, general consuls, and senior civil and military officials.

Permanent Committee edit

The "Comisión Permanente del Congreso de la Unión", translated variously as the Permanent Committee or Standing Committee, is a body of 19 deputies and 18 senators that is responsible for tasks relating to the Congress when it is in recess.

Term edit

It is conventional to refer to each Legislature by the Roman numeral of its term. Thus, the current Congress (whose term lasts from 2021 to 2024) is known as the "LXV Legislature"; the previous Congress (whose term lasted from 2018 to 2021) was the "LXIV Legislature", and so forth. The I Legislature of Congress was the one that met right after the Constituent Congress that enacted the 1857 Constitution.

Early in the 20th century, the revolutionary leader Francisco I. Madero popularized the slogan Sufragio Efectivo – no Reelección ("Effective suffrage, no reelection"). In keeping with that long-held principle, and until 2014, the 1917 Constitution stated that "Deputies and Senators could not be reelected for the next immediate term".[7]

Reelection edit

On February 10, 2014, Article 59 of the Mexican Constitution was amended to allow reelection to the legislative bodies for the first time. Starting with the general election of 2018, deputies and senators are allowed to run for reelection.[8] Members of the Chamber of Deputies may serve up to four terms of three years each while members of the Senate may serve two terms of six years each; in total, members of both houses will be allowed to remain in office for a total of 12 years.[9]

Last election edit

Senate edit

Party Constituency Proportional Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
National Regeneration Movement 661,068 1.18 2 21,261,577 37.50 13 55 New
National Action Party 600,423 1.07 1 9,971,804 17.59 6 23   15
Institutional Revolutionary Party 3,855,984 6.86 0 9,013,658 15.90 6 13   44
Party of the Democratic Revolution 96,393 0.17 0 2,984,861 5.27 2 8   15
Citizens' Movement 570,774 1.01 2 2,654,452 4.68 2 7   6
Ecologist Green Party 1,198,011 2.13 0 2,528,175 4.46 2 7   3
Labor Party 51,260 0.09 0 2,164,442 3.82 1 6   2
Social Encounter Party 28,878 0.05 0 1,320,559 2.33 0 8 New
New Alliance Party 593,507 1.06 0 1,307,015 2.31 0 1   0
MORENA–PT–PES[a] 23,754,422 42.24 53
PAN–PRD–MC[b] 14,222,046 25.29 25
PRI–PVEM–PNA[c] 7,145,869 12.71 13
Independents 1,109,149 1.97 1,109,149 1.97 0   0
Write-ins 30,568 0.05 31,820 0.06
Invalid/blank votes 2,319,489 4.12 2,344,357 4.14
Total 56,237,841 100 96 56,691,869 100 32 128 0
Registered voters/turnout 89,994,039 62.49 89,994,039 63.52
Source: INE

a Of the 53 seats won by the MORENA-PT–PES alliance, 40 were taken by MORENA, 8 by the PES, and 5 by the PT

b Of the 25 seats won by the PAN–PRD–MC alliance, 16 were taken by the PAN, 6 by the PRD, and 3 by the MC

c Of the 13 seats won by the PRI–PVEM–PNA alliance, 7 were taken by the PRI, 5 by the PVEM, and 1 by the PNA

Chamber of Deputies edit

Party District Proportional Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
National Regeneration Movement 709,840 1.27 8 20,972,573 37.25 84 189   154
National Action Party 697,595 1.25 5 10,096,588 17.93 41 83   25
Institutional Revolutionary Party 4,351,824 7.78 1 9,310,523 16.54 38 45   158
Party of the Democratic Revolution 124,808 0.22 0 2,967,969 5.27 12 21   35
Ecologist Green Party 1,429,802 2.55 0 2,695,405 4.79 11 16   31
Citizens' Movement 268,876 0.48 0 2,485,198 4.41 10 27   1
Labor Party 67,429 0.12 0 2,211,753 3.93 4 61   55
New Alliance Party 705,432 1.26 0 1,391,376 2.47 0 2   8
Social Encounter Party 54,906 0.10 0 1,353,941 2.40 0 56   48
MORENA–PT–PES[a] 23,513,132 42.01 210
PAN–PRD–MC[b] 14,381,872 25.70 63
PRI–PVEM–PNA[c] 6,862,372 12.26 13
Independents 539,347 0.96 0 539,347 0.96 0 0   1
Write-ins 32,625 0.06 32,959 0.06
Invalid/blank votes 2,227,573 3.98 2,242,615 3.98
Total 55,967,433 100 300 56,300,247 100 200 500 0
Registered voters/turnout 89,994,039 62.20 89,994,039 63.21
Source: INE

a Of the 210 seats won by the MORENA-PT–PES alliance, 97 were taken by MORENA, 57 by the PT, and 56 by the PES

b Of the 63 seats won by the PAN–PRD–MC alliance, 37 were taken by the PAN, 17 by the MC, and 9 by the PRD

c Of the 13 seats won by the PRI–PVEM–PNA alliance, 6 were taken by the PRI, 5 by the PVEM, and 2 by the PNA

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Manual de Percepciones de los Senadores..." (PDF). Senado de la República. p. 5. Retrieved 19 August 2011.[dead link]
  2. ^ "2 Mil 312 Millones Para Sueldos de Senadores y Diputados en 2010". El Siglo de Torreón. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  3. ^ (PDF). Cámara de Diputados. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  4. ^ . La Razón. Archived from the original on 19 August 2017. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  7. ^ Constitution of 1917, articles 50, 59.
  8. ^ . Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas de la UNAM (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 14 October 2003. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  9. ^ Becerra, Bertha (20 May 2014). "Habría reelección de diputados y senadores a partir del 2018". La Prensa (in Spanish). Organización Editorial Mexicana. Retrieved 1 April 2015.

External links edit

  • Chamber of Deputies
  • Senate

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Congress of the Union news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish March 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 023 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Congreso de la Union see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated es Congreso de la Union to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this template message The Congress of the Union Spanish Congreso de la Union pronounced koŋˈɡɾeso de lawˈnjon formally known as the General Congress of the United Mexican States Congreso General de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos is the legislature of the federal government of Mexico consisting of two chambers the Senate of the Republic and the Chamber of Deputies Its 628 members 128 senators and 500 deputies meet in Mexico City General Congress of theUnited Mexican States Congreso General de losEstados Unidos MexicanosLXV LegislatureTypeTypeBicameralHousesSenate of the RepublicChamber of DeputiesHistoryFounded28 September 1821 1821 09 28 LeadershipPresident of the Senate Ana Lilia Rivera MORENA since 1 September 2023 2023 09 01 President of the Chamber of DeputiesMarcela Guerra Castillo PRI since 1 September 2023 2023 09 01 StructureSeats628 500 Deputies 128 Senators Senate political groupsGovernment 70 MORENA 58 PVEM 7 PT 5 Opposition 55 PAN 17 MC 12 PRI 13 PRD 4 Independent 9 Chamber of Deputies political groupsGovernment 276 MORENA 202 PVEM 41 PT 33 Opposition 221 PAN 111 PRI 70 MC 28 PRD 12 AuthorityTitle III Chapter II of thePolitical Constitution of the United Mexican StatesSalary 500 000 pesos Senator 1 2 150 139 pesos Deputy 3 4 ElectionsLast Senate election1 July 2018 2018 07 01 Last Chamber of Deputies election6 June 2021 2021 06 06 Next Senate election2 June 2024 2024 06 02 Next Chamber of Deputies election2 June 2024 2024 06 02 MottoLa Patria Es Primero The Fatherland Is First Meeting placeSenate BuildingMexico CitySan Lazaro BuildingMexico CityWebsiteSenate websiteChamber of Deputies websiteConstitutionMexican Constitution of 1917Rules Organic Law of the General Congress of the United Mexican States Spanish Rules for the Interior Government of the General Congress of the United Mexican States Spanish San Lazaro Building the Chamber of Deputies Congress of the Union Contents 1 Structure 2 Elections 3 Powers 4 Permanent Committee 5 Term 5 1 Reelection 6 Last election 6 1 Senate 6 2 Chamber of Deputies 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksStructure editMain articles Senate of the Republic Mexico and Chamber of Deputies Mexico The Congress is a bicameral body consisting of two chambers The Senate of the Republic and the Chamber of Deputies Its structure and responsibilities are defined in the Third Title Second Chapter Articles 50 to 79 of the 1917 Constitution The upper chamber is the Senate Camara de Senadores or Senado It comprises 128 seats 96 members are elected by plurality vote with 3 members being elected in each State the other 32 members are elected by proportional representation in a single country wide constituency The lower house is the Chamber of Deputies or Camara de Diputados It has 500 seats 300 members are elected by plurality vote and the other 200 members are elected according to proportional representation through a system of regional lists one for each of the 5 constituencies established for the election by law Elections editMain article Elections in Mexico The Congress of the Union Congreso de la Union has two chambers The Chamber of Deputies Camara de Diputados has 500 members each elected for a three year term 300 of whom are elected in single seat constituencies by plurality with the remaining 200 members elected by proportional representation in 5 multi state 40 seat constituencies 5 The 200 PR seats are distributed generally without taking account the 300 plurality seats parallel voting but since 1996 a party cannot get more seats overall than 8 above its result for the PR seats a party must win 42 of the votes for the PR seats to achieve an overall majority There are two exceptions to that rule A party can lose only PR seats by that rule not plurality seats Also a party cannot get more than 300 seats overall even if it has more than 52 of the votes for the PR seats The Chamber of Senators Camara de Senadores has 128 members elected for a six year term 96 of them in three seat constituencies corresponding to the nation s 31 states and Mexico City and 32 by proportional representation on a nationwide basis 6 In the state constituencies two seats are awarded to the plurality winner and one to the first runner up Powers editThe powers allocated in the Congress are defined in article 73 of the Constitution Among its powers the Congress can admit new States into the Union alter the allocation of powers granted to the federal government lay and collect taxes declare war upon request of the Government provide for and maintain the Union s armed forces and coordinate economic activities Article 74 75 and 76 of the Constitution state that each Chamber can address specific matters In fact some powers are reserved either to the Chamber of Deputies or to the Chamber of Senators making the Congress of the union an imperfect bicameralism For example the former can approve the federal budget submitted by the Government while the latter has the power to analyze the foreign policy of the Government approve or dismiss the Presidential nominations of the Attorney General Supreme Court Justices diplomatic agents general consuls and senior civil and military officials Permanent Committee editThe Comision Permanente del Congreso de la Union translated variously as the Permanent Committee or Standing Committee is a body of 19 deputies and 18 senators that is responsible for tasks relating to the Congress when it is in recess Term editIt is conventional to refer to each Legislature by the Roman numeral of its term Thus the current Congress whose term lasts from 2021 to 2024 is known as the LXV Legislature the previous Congress whose term lasted from 2018 to 2021 was the LXIV Legislature and so forth The I Legislature of Congress was the one that met right after the Constituent Congress that enacted the 1857 Constitution Early in the 20th century the revolutionary leader Francisco I Madero popularized the slogan Sufragio Efectivo no Reeleccion Effective suffrage no reelection In keeping with that long held principle and until 2014 the 1917 Constitution stated that Deputies and Senators could not be reelected for the next immediate term 7 Reelection edit See also Sexenio Mexico On February 10 2014 Article 59 of the Mexican Constitution was amended to allow reelection to the legislative bodies for the first time Starting with the general election of 2018 deputies and senators are allowed to run for reelection 8 Members of the Chamber of Deputies may serve up to four terms of three years each while members of the Senate may serve two terms of six years each in total members of both houses will be allowed to remain in office for a total of 12 years 9 Last election editSee also 2018 Mexican general election and LXIV Legislature of the Mexican Congress Senate edit Party Constituency Proportional Totalseats Votes Seats Votes Seats National Regeneration Movement 661 068 1 18 2 21 261 577 37 50 13 55 New National Action Party 600 423 1 07 1 9 971 804 17 59 6 23 nbsp 15 Institutional Revolutionary Party 3 855 984 6 86 0 9 013 658 15 90 6 13 nbsp 44 Party of the Democratic Revolution 96 393 0 17 0 2 984 861 5 27 2 8 nbsp 15 Citizens Movement 570 774 1 01 2 2 654 452 4 68 2 7 nbsp 6 Ecologist Green Party 1 198 011 2 13 0 2 528 175 4 46 2 7 nbsp 3 Labor Party 51 260 0 09 0 2 164 442 3 82 1 6 nbsp 2 Social Encounter Party 28 878 0 05 0 1 320 559 2 33 0 8 New New Alliance Party 593 507 1 06 0 1 307 015 2 31 0 1 nbsp 0 MORENA PT PES a 23 754 422 42 24 53 PAN PRD MC b 14 222 046 25 29 25 PRI PVEM PNA c 7 145 869 12 71 13 Independents 1 109 149 1 97 1 109 149 1 97 0 nbsp 0 Write ins 30 568 0 05 31 820 0 06 Invalid blank votes 2 319 489 4 12 2 344 357 4 14 Total 56 237 841 100 96 56 691 869 100 32 128 0 Registered voters turnout 89 994 039 62 49 89 994 039 63 52 Source INE a Of the 53 seats won by the MORENA PT PES alliance 40 were taken by MORENA 8 by the PES and 5 by the PTb Of the 25 seats won by the PAN PRD MC alliance 16 were taken by the PAN 6 by the PRD and 3 by the MCc Of the 13 seats won by the PRI PVEM PNA alliance 7 were taken by the PRI 5 by the PVEM and 1 by the PNA Chamber of Deputies edit Party District Proportional Totalseats Votes Seats Votes Seats National Regeneration Movement 709 840 1 27 8 20 972 573 37 25 84 189 nbsp 154 National Action Party 697 595 1 25 5 10 096 588 17 93 41 83 nbsp 25 Institutional Revolutionary Party 4 351 824 7 78 1 9 310 523 16 54 38 45 nbsp 158 Party of the Democratic Revolution 124 808 0 22 0 2 967 969 5 27 12 21 nbsp 35 Ecologist Green Party 1 429 802 2 55 0 2 695 405 4 79 11 16 nbsp 31 Citizens Movement 268 876 0 48 0 2 485 198 4 41 10 27 nbsp 1 Labor Party 67 429 0 12 0 2 211 753 3 93 4 61 nbsp 55 New Alliance Party 705 432 1 26 0 1 391 376 2 47 0 2 nbsp 8 Social Encounter Party 54 906 0 10 0 1 353 941 2 40 0 56 nbsp 48 MORENA PT PES a 23 513 132 42 01 210 PAN PRD MC b 14 381 872 25 70 63 PRI PVEM PNA c 6 862 372 12 26 13 Independents 539 347 0 96 0 539 347 0 96 0 0 nbsp 1 Write ins 32 625 0 06 32 959 0 06 Invalid blank votes 2 227 573 3 98 2 242 615 3 98 Total 55 967 433 100 300 56 300 247 100 200 500 0 Registered voters turnout 89 994 039 62 20 89 994 039 63 21 Source INE a Of the 210 seats won by the MORENA PT PES alliance 97 were taken by MORENA 57 by the PT and 56 by the PESb Of the 63 seats won by the PAN PRD MC alliance 37 were taken by the PAN 17 by the MC and 9 by the PRDc Of the 13 seats won by the PRI PVEM PNA alliance 6 were taken by the PRI 5 by the PVEM and 2 by the PNASee also editChamber of Deputies Mexico Senate Mexico Politics of Mexico List of legislatures by country History of democracy in MexicoReferences edit Manual de Percepciones de los Senadores PDF Senado de la Republica p 5 Retrieved 19 August 2011 dead link 2 Mil 312 Millones Para Sueldos de Senadores y Diputados en 2010 El Siglo de Torreon Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Retrieved 19 August 2011 Poder Legislativo PDF Camara de Diputados Archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2011 Consejeros del InfoDF ganan mas que Ebrard La Razon Archived from the original on 19 August 2017 Retrieved 19 August 2018 El proyecto Eleccion 2012 Mexico Elecciones Candidatos a la Presidencia encuestas electorales Archived from the original on 23 August 2011 Retrieved 29 August 2011 El proyecto Eleccion 2012 Mexico Elecciones Candidatos a la Presidencia encuestas electorales Archived from the original on 23 August 2011 Retrieved 29 August 2011 Constitution of 1917 articles 50 59 Constitucion Politica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos Articulo 59 Instituto de Investigaciones Juridicas de la UNAM in Spanish Archived from the original on 14 October 2003 Retrieved 2 April 2015 Becerra Bertha 20 May 2014 Habria reeleccion de diputados y senadores a partir del 2018 La Prensa in Spanish Organizacion Editorial Mexicana Retrieved 1 April 2015 External links editChamber of Deputies Senate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Congress of the Union amp oldid 1213127687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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