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Parliament of Bhutan

The Parliament of Bhutan (Dzongkha: རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་ཚོགས་ཁང་ gyelyong tshokhang) consists of the King of Bhutan together with a bicameral parliament.[1][nb 1] This bicameral parliament is made up of an upper house, the National Council and a lower house, the National Assembly.[nb 2] The current parliamentary framework replaced the unicameral Tshogdu in 2007, with the first members taking seats in 2008.

Parliament of Bhutan

རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་ཚོགས་ཁང་

gyelyong tshokhang
8th Session of the First Parliament
Type
Type
HousesNational Council
National Assembly
Leadership
Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck
since December 14, 2006
Chairperson of the National Council
Tashi Dorji, Nonpartisan
since 10 May 2018
Speaker of the National Assembly
Wangchuk Namgyel, DNT
since 07 November 2018
Structure
Seats72
25 Councilmen
47 Assemblymen
National Council political groups
Non-partisan (20)
Appointed (5)
National Assembly political groups
Government (30)
  •   DNT (30)

Opposition (17)

AuthorityArticle X, Constitution of Bhutan
Elections
National Council last election
April 20, 2018
National Assembly last election
15 September 2018 and 18 October 2018
Meeting place
Gyelyong Tshokhang, Thimphu
Website
National Council of Bhutan
National Assembly of Bhutan

Coordinates: 27°29′24″N 89°38′18″E / 27.489955°N 89.638309°E / 27.489955; 89.638309

Composition of Parliament

The National Council of Bhutan is the upper house, or house of review in the bicameral legislature. It consists of 25 members: one directly elected from each of the 20 dzongkhags (districts) and 5 appointed by the King under election laws. The National Council meets at least twice a year. The membership elects a Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson from its number. Members and candidates of the National Council are prohibited from holding political party affiliation.[nb 3][2][3]

The National Assembly of Bhutan is the lower house. It consists of a maximum of 47 members directly elected by the citizens of constituencies within each dzongkhag (district) according to election laws. Each constituency is represented by one National Assembly member; each of the 20 Dzongkhags must be represented by between 2–7 members. Constituencies are reapportioned every 10 years. The National Assembly meets at least twice a year, and elects a Speaker and Deputy Speaker from among its members. Members and candidates are allowed to hold political party affiliation.[nb 4][3][4]

The Constitution sets forth the procedure of the formation of the executive branch and its ministries, including the post of Prime Minister, according to Parliamentary electoral results. The King recognizes the leader or nominee of the party that wins the majority of seats in the National Assembly as the Prime Minister.[nb 5] The Prime Minister is limited to two terms of office.[nb 6] Other Ministers are appointed from among National Assembly members by the King on advice of the Prime Minister.[nb 7] All Ministers must be natural-born citizens of Bhutan, and there is a limit of two Ministers from any one Dzongkhag.[nb 8]

The King of Bhutan fulfills further parliamentary duties by reviewing and assenting to bills in order to enact Bhutanese legislation, and when necessary, by initiating national referendums under election laws.[nb 9]

Parliamentary powers and procedure

The National Council and National Assembly operate under a framework of enumerated substantive powers and duties under the Constitution.[1] In addition, the procedural framework of each body is codified independently in subsequently enacted legislation: the National Council Act[2] and the National Assembly Act.[4] The Acts define operating procedure (such as quora and voting) and delegation of duties to committees much like bylaws; the Acts themselves also provide some incidentally related substantive law, such as offenses and penalties for officeholders.[2][4]

Legislative powers of Parliament

Foremost among the powers and duties of Parliament is the passing of bills. Either the upper house National Council, the lower house National Assembly, or the Attorney General may author bills to be passed as acts, with the exception of money and financial bills, which are the sole purview of the National Assembly.[nb 10][5] Legislation must be presented bicamerally, at times in joint sittings of the National Council and National Assembly, however bills may pass by default without vote when none is conducted before the close of the present session.[nb 11] When a bill has been introduced and passed by one house, it must present the bill to the other house within thirty days from the date of passing, and the bill may be passed during the next session of Parliament.[nb 12] In the case of budget bills and urgent matters, a bill must be passed in the same session of Parliament.[nb 13] Bills are ultimately subject to veto and modification by the King, however the King must assent to bills resubmitted after joint sitting and deliberation by the National Council and National Assembly.[nb 14]

Other powers of Parliament

Parliament has the sole authority to alter Bhutan's international territorial boundaries, and internal Dzongkhag and Gewog divisions, with the consent of at least 75% of the total number of members (currently 54).[nb 15] Parliament also oversees local government administrations: Dzongkhag Tshogdus, Gewog Tshogdes, and Thromdes.[6]

The Constitution provides that the National Assembly may, with support of at least two-thirds of its members (currently 32), motion of no confidence in the Government. If the vote passes, the King shall dismiss the Government.[nb 16]

Notes

  1. ^ Constitution: Art. 1, § 3; Art. 10
  2. ^ Constitution: Art. 11; Art. 12
  3. ^ Constitution: Art. 11
  4. ^ Constitution: Art. 12
  5. ^ Constitution: Art. 17, § 1
  6. ^ Constitution: Art. 17, § 2
  7. ^ Constitution: Art. 17, § 3
  8. ^ Constitution: Art. 17, §§ 4, 5
  9. ^ Constitution: Art. 13; Art. 35
  10. ^ Constitution: Art. 13, § 2
  11. ^ Constitution: Art. 13, §§ 8, 9
  12. ^ Constitution: Art. 13, § 5
  13. ^ Constitution: Art. 13, § 5
  14. ^ Constitution: Art. 13, §§ 10, 11
  15. ^ Constitution: Art. 1, § 4
  16. ^ Constitution: Art. 7, §§ 6, 7

See also

References

  1. ^ a b (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2008-07-18. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2010-10-13.
  2. ^ a b c "National Council Act 2008" (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2008. Retrieved 2011-01-02.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b "Election Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2008" (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2008-07-28. Retrieved 2011-01-30.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ a b c "National Assembly Act 2008" (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2008-08-12. Retrieved 2011-01-02.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2006-06-30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-24. Retrieved 2011-01-23.
  6. ^ (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2009-09-11. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2011. Retrieved 2011-01-20.

External links

parliament, bhutan, dzongkha, ངས, གས, ཁང, gyelyong, tshokhang, consists, king, bhutan, together, with, bicameral, parliament, this, bicameral, parliament, made, upper, house, national, council, lower, house, national, assembly, current, parliamentary, framewor. The Parliament of Bhutan Dzongkha ར ལ ཡ ངས ཚ གས ཁང gyelyong tshokhang consists of the King of Bhutan together with a bicameral parliament 1 nb 1 This bicameral parliament is made up of an upper house the National Council and a lower house the National Assembly nb 2 The current parliamentary framework replaced the unicameral Tshogdu in 2007 with the first members taking seats in 2008 Parliament of Bhutan ར ལ ཡ ངས ཚ གས ཁང gyelyong tshokhang8th Session of the First ParliamentTypeTypeBicameralHousesNational CouncilNational AssemblyLeadershipDruk GyalpoJigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck since December 14 2006Chairperson of the National CouncilTashi Dorji Nonpartisan since 10 May 2018Speaker of the National AssemblyWangchuk Namgyel DNT since 07 November 2018StructureSeats72 25 Councilmen 47 AssemblymenNational Council political groupsNon partisan 20 Appointed 5 National Assembly political groupsGovernment 30 DNT 30 Opposition 17 DPT 17 AuthorityArticle X Constitution of BhutanElectionsNational Council last electionApril 20 2018National Assembly last election15 September 2018 and 18 October 2018Meeting placeGyelyong Tshokhang ThimphuWebsiteNational Council of BhutanNational Assembly of BhutanThis article contains Tibetan script Without proper rendering support you may see very small fonts misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Tibetan characters Coordinates 27 29 24 N 89 38 18 E 27 489955 N 89 638309 E 27 489955 89 638309 Contents 1 Composition of Parliament 2 Parliamentary powers and procedure 2 1 Legislative powers of Parliament 2 2 Other powers of Parliament 3 Notes 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksComposition of Parliament EditThe National Council of Bhutan is the upper house or house of review in the bicameral legislature It consists of 25 members one directly elected from each of the 20 dzongkhags districts and 5 appointed by the King under election laws The National Council meets at least twice a year The membership elects a Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson from its number Members and candidates of the National Council are prohibited from holding political party affiliation nb 3 2 3 The National Assembly of Bhutan is the lower house It consists of a maximum of 47 members directly elected by the citizens of constituencies within each dzongkhag district according to election laws Each constituency is represented by one National Assembly member each of the 20 Dzongkhags must be represented by between 2 7 members Constituencies are reapportioned every 10 years The National Assembly meets at least twice a year and elects a Speaker and Deputy Speaker from among its members Members and candidates are allowed to hold political party affiliation nb 4 3 4 The Constitution sets forth the procedure of the formation of the executive branch and its ministries including the post of Prime Minister according to Parliamentary electoral results The King recognizes the leader or nominee of the party that wins the majority of seats in the National Assembly as the Prime Minister nb 5 The Prime Minister is limited to two terms of office nb 6 Other Ministers are appointed from among National Assembly members by the King on advice of the Prime Minister nb 7 All Ministers must be natural born citizens of Bhutan and there is a limit of two Ministers from any one Dzongkhag nb 8 The King of Bhutan fulfills further parliamentary duties by reviewing and assenting to bills in order to enact Bhutanese legislation and when necessary by initiating national referendums under election laws nb 9 Parliamentary powers and procedure EditThe National Council and National Assembly operate under a framework of enumerated substantive powers and duties under the Constitution 1 In addition the procedural framework of each body is codified independently in subsequently enacted legislation the National Council Act 2 and the National Assembly Act 4 The Acts define operating procedure such as quora and voting and delegation of duties to committees much like bylaws the Acts themselves also provide some incidentally related substantive law such as offenses and penalties for officeholders 2 4 Legislative powers of Parliament Edit Foremost among the powers and duties of Parliament is the passing of bills Either the upper house National Council the lower house National Assembly or the Attorney General may author bills to be passed as acts with the exception of money and financial bills which are the sole purview of the National Assembly nb 10 5 Legislation must be presented bicamerally at times in joint sittings of the National Council and National Assembly however bills may pass by default without vote when none is conducted before the close of the present session nb 11 When a bill has been introduced and passed by one house it must present the bill to the other house within thirty days from the date of passing and the bill may be passed during the next session of Parliament nb 12 In the case of budget bills and urgent matters a bill must be passed in the same session of Parliament nb 13 Bills are ultimately subject to veto and modification by the King however the King must assent to bills resubmitted after joint sitting and deliberation by the National Council and National Assembly nb 14 Other powers of Parliament Edit Parliament has the sole authority to alter Bhutan s international territorial boundaries and internal Dzongkhag and Gewog divisions with the consent of at least 75 of the total number of members currently 54 nb 15 Parliament also oversees local government administrations Dzongkhag Tshogdus Gewog Tshogdes and Thromdes 6 The Constitution provides that the National Assembly may with support of at least two thirds of its members currently 32 motion of no confidence in the Government If the vote passes the King shall dismiss the Government nb 16 Notes Edit Constitution Art 1 3 Art 10 Constitution Art 11 Art 12 Constitution Art 11 Constitution Art 12 Constitution Art 17 1 Constitution Art 17 2 Constitution Art 17 3 Constitution Art 17 4 5 Constitution Art 13 Art 35 Constitution Art 13 2 Constitution Art 13 8 9 Constitution Art 13 5 Constitution Art 13 5 Constitution Art 13 10 11 Constitution Art 1 4 Constitution Art 7 6 7See also EditNational Council of Bhutan National Assembly of Bhutan Bhutanese legislation Constitution of Bhutan Elections in Bhutan Politics of Bhutan List of legislatures by country Bicameralism TshogduReferences Edit a b Constitution of the Kingdom of Bhutan English PDF Government of Bhutan 2008 07 18 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2011 Retrieved 2010 10 13 a b c National Council Act 2008 PDF Government of Bhutan 2008 Retrieved 2011 01 02 permanent dead link a b Election Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2008 PDF Government of Bhutan 2008 07 28 Retrieved 2011 01 30 permanent dead link a b c National Assembly Act 2008 PDF Government of Bhutan 2008 08 12 Retrieved 2011 01 02 permanent dead link Office of the Attorney General Act of Bhutan 2006 PDF Government of Bhutan 2006 06 30 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 04 24 Retrieved 2011 01 23 Local Government Act of Bhutan 2009 PDF Government of Bhutan 2009 09 11 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2011 Retrieved 2011 01 20 External links Edit National Council of Bhutan Online Government of Bhutan Retrieved 2011 02 08 National Assembly of Bhutan Online Government of Bhutan Retrieved 2011 02 08 Constitution of the Kingdom of Bhutan PDF Government of Bhutan 2008 07 18 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2011 Retrieved 2010 10 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parliament of Bhutan amp oldid 1135281459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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