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Federal Assembly (Switzerland)

The Federal Assembly,[1] also Swiss parliament,[2] is the federal bicameral legislature of Switzerland. The lower house is the 200-seat National Council and the upper house is the 46-seat Council of States. It meets in Bern in the Federal Palace.

Federal Assembly

Type
Type
HousesCouncil of States
National Council
Leadership
President of the National Council
President of the Council of States
Structure
Seats246
46 Council of States
200 National Council
National Council political groups
  SVP/UDC 62
  SP/PS 41
  The Centre 29
  FDP/PLR 28
  Greens 23
  GLP/PVL 10
  EvP/PEV 2
  EDU/UDF 2
  MCG 2
  LT 1
Council of States political groups
  The Centre 15
  FDP/PLR 11
  SP/PS 9
  SVP/UDC 6
  Greens 3
  GLP/PVL 1
  MCG 1
Elections
Last National Council election
22 October 2023
Last Council of States election
October-November 2023
Meeting place
Federal Palace of Switzerland, Bern
Website
www.parliament.ch

The houses have identical powers. Members of both houses represent the cantons, but, whereas seats in the National Council are distributed in proportion to population, each canton has two seats in the Council of States, except the six 'half-cantons', which have one seat each. Both are elected in full once every four years, with the last election being held in 2023.

The Federal Assembly possesses the federal government's legislative power, along with the separate constitutional right of citizen's initiative. For a law to pass, it must be passed by both houses. The two houses may come together as a United Federal Assembly in certain circumstances, such as to elect the Federal Council (the head of government and state), the Federal Chancellor, the federal judges or (only in times of great national danger) a general.

History edit

Prior to the establishment of the federal state in 1848, the only central organ of Switzerland was the Federal Diet (Tagsatzung). Following the Sonderbund War in 1847, the Tagsatzung became responsible for drawing up the Swiss Federal Constitution.[3]

The process of formulating legislative power resulted in clashing opinions, in particular in relation to the representation of the various cantons: the radicals, in the majority in the largest cantons, pushed for a system where representation was purely proportional to the population of each township; the small cantons, for their part, feared being marginalized. After long debates, a compromise was found by adopting the American model of bicameralism; the parliament will be composed of two chambers with equal power, and the agreement of both will be required to take a decision. The National Council, which represents the people, will comprise representatives from each canton with their distribution being proportional to the population of the cantons, while the Council of States, which represents the cantons, will be composed of the same number of representatives from each canton. According to the Constitution of 1848, the Federal Assembly is "the supreme authority of the Confederation".[3]

The Tagsatzung accepted the draft constitution in June 1848. On September 12, following the vote of the various cantons, it noted that the Constitution had been approved and dissolved itself on September 22, as required by the transitional provisions of the approved text. During the month of October 1848, elections were organized in the cantons in order to elect the deputies. After a few skirmishes, particularly in the canton of Fribourg, the results were announced which confirmed the victory of the radicals, who won more than three-quarters of the seats in the National Council and 30 of the 44 seats in the Council of States. On, November 16 1848, Parliament elected the first Federal Council.[3] In 1874, following the revision of the Constitution and the introduction of extended popular rights, the Federal Assembly became "the supreme authority of the Confederation subject to the rights of the people and the cantons".[3]

The organization of the two councils has changed little over time. When the National Council was created, the total number of seats was 111.[3] This number was not fixed and evolved in proportion to the growth of the Swiss population until 1962 when the definitive number of seats was established at 200; the term of office, meanwhile, was increased from the original three years to four years in 1931. The mode of election, originally according to the majority system, transitioned to proportional representation in 1918.[4] The Council of States, meanwhile, was not modified until 1979, by adding two new seats for the Canton of Jura which had just been created.[3]

Composition edit

The Federal Assembly is made up of two chambers:

Seats in the National Council are allocated to the cantons proportionally, based on population. In the Council of States, every canton has two seats (except for the former "half-cantons", which have one seat each).

United Federal Assembly edit

On occasions the two houses sit jointly as the "United Federal Assembly" (German: Vereinigte Bundesversammlung, French: Assemblée fédérale, Chambres réunies, Italian: Assemblea federale plenaria, Romansh: Assamblea federala plenara). This is done to:

The United Federal Assembly is presided by the National Council's presidency.

The Federal Assembly also confirms the appointment of the Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner (appointed by the Federal Council).[5]

Groups edit

Parties can cooperate in parliamentary groups, also called political groups, allowing smaller parties access to rights as part of a caucus. At least five members from the same Council are needed to form a group. Only informal groups exist in the Council of States. Members of the National Council are required to be in a formal group in order to be able to sit on a committee.[6]

Since March 2009, there have been six groups in the Federal Assembly. The latest group to form was the Conservative Democratic Party which split off the Swiss People's Party in 2008. The Christian Democrats/EPP/glp Group (CEg) was formed after the 2007 elections, out of the former Christian Democratic (C) and EPP (E) groups. The current FTP/Liberal group (RL) was formed in 2003 out of the former FDP (R) and Liberal (L) groups; since the 2009 fusion of the Free Democratic and Liberal Parties, RL is once again a single-party group. In 2011, the CEg was disbanded, the Green Liberals formed their own parliamentary group (GL) and the three Christian parties formed the Christian-Evangelical Group (CE).

51st legislature (2019–2023) edit

Currently (for the legislative period of 2019–2023), the six parliamentary groups are composed as follows:

Group Parties NC CS Total
People's parliamentary group (V) Swiss People's Party 53 6 62
Ticino League 1 0
Federal Democratic Union 1 0
Independent 0 1
Social Democrats parliamentary group (S) Social Democratic Party 39 8 47
Centre parliamentary group CVP-EVP-BDP (M-CEB) Christian Democratic People's Party 25 14 45
Conservative Democratic Party 3 0
Evangelical People's Party 3 0
FDP.The Liberals parliamentary group (RL) FDP.The Liberals 29 12 41
Green parliamentary group (G) Green Party 28 5 35
Swiss Party of Labour 1 0
Solidarity 1 0
Green Liberal parliamentary group (GL) Green Liberal Party 16 0 16

50th legislature (2015–2019) edit

After the 2015 federal election, the Federal Assembly was composed of 7 groups:[7]

Group Parties NC CS Total President
V Swiss People's Party group
Fraktion der Schweizerischen Volkspartei
Groupe de l'Union Démocratique du Centre
SVP/UDC (69), Lega (2), MCR (1), Ind. (2) 68 6 74 Thomas Aeschi
S Social Democratic group
Sozialdemokratische fraction
Groupe socialiste
SP/PS 42 12 54 Roger Nordmann
RL FDP-Liberal-Radical group
FDP-Liberale fraktion
Groupe Libéral-Radical
FDP/PLR 33 12 45 Beat Walti
C CVP group
CVP-fraktion
Groupe PDC
CVP/PDC (40), EVP/PEV (2), CSP OW (1) 29 14 43 Filippo Lombardi
G Greens group
Grüne fraktion
Groupe des Verts
Greens (12), PdA/PST (1) 12 1 13 Balthasar Glättli
BD BDP group
BDP fraktion
Groupe PBD
BDP/PBD 7 1 8 Rosmarie Quadranti
GL Green-liberal group
Grünliberale fraktion
Groupe Vert'Libéral
GLP/PVL 8 0 8 Tiana Angelina Moser
Groups Vacant
V S RL C G BD GL
Opening 74 55 45 43 13 8 7 0
2019-05-29[a] 54 8
2019-06-03[b] 42 1
  1. ^ National Councillor Daniel Frei leaves the SP and joins the GLP
  2. ^ National Councillor Daniel Fässler is elected to the Council of States and remains in the C group, but the canton of Appenzell-Innerhoden decides to not fill his National Council seat which is left vacant until the federal election

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ (German: Bundesversammlung, French: Assemblée fédérale, Italian: Assemblea federale, Romansh: Assamblea federala)
  2. ^ (Parlament, Parlement, Parlamento)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Graf, Martin; Martin, Pierre-G. (2 December 2015). "Assemblée fédérale". Dictionnaire Historique de la Suisse (in German). Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  4. ^ "Initiative populaire 'Election proportionnelle du Conseil national'". Chancellerie fédérale ChF. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  5. ^ Federal Act on Data Protection of 19 June 1992 (status as of 1 January 2014), Federal Chancellery of Switzerland (page visited on 18 September 2016).
  6. ^ "Parliamentary groups". www.parlament.ch. Retrieved 11 December 2019.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Les groupes parlementaires de l'Assemblée fédérale depuis la 46e législature". parlament.ch. Retrieved 11 September 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Federal Chancellor Corina Casanova, ed. (28 April 2015), , Berne, Switzerland: Swiss Federal Chancellery FCh of the Swiss Confederation, archived from the original (PDF) on 21 January 2016, retrieved 4 January 2016

External links edit

federal, assembly, switzerland, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, august, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, french, article, machine, translatio. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French August 2021 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French 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 6 129 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 French Wikipedia article at fr Assemblee federale Suisse see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Assemblee federale Suisse to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Federal Assembly 1 also Swiss parliament 2 is the federal bicameral legislature of Switzerland The lower house is the 200 seat National Council and the upper house is the 46 seat Council of States It meets in Bern in the Federal Palace Federal Assembly Bundesversammlung German Assemblee federale French Assemblea federale Italian Assamblea federala Romansh TypeTypeBicameralHousesCouncil of States National CouncilLeadershipPresident of the National CouncilEric Nussbaumer SP PSPresident of the Council of StatesEva Herzog SP PSStructureSeats24646 Council of States200 National CouncilNational Council political groups SVP UDC 62 SP PS 41 The Centre 29 FDP PLR 28 Greens 23 GLP PVL 10 EvP PEV 2 EDU UDF 2 MCG 2 LT 1Council of States political groups The Centre 15 FDP PLR 11 SP PS 9 SVP UDC 6 Greens 3 GLP PVL 1 MCG 1ElectionsLast National Council election22 October 2023Last Council of States electionOctober November 2023Meeting placeFederal Palace of Switzerland BernWebsitewww wbr parliament wbr chThe houses have identical powers Members of both houses represent the cantons but whereas seats in the National Council are distributed in proportion to population each canton has two seats in the Council of States except the six half cantons which have one seat each Both are elected in full once every four years with the last election being held in 2023 The Federal Assembly possesses the federal government s legislative power along with the separate constitutional right of citizen s initiative For a law to pass it must be passed by both houses The two houses may come together as a United Federal Assembly in certain circumstances such as to elect the Federal Council the head of government and state the Federal Chancellor the federal judges or only in times of great national danger a general Contents 1 History 2 Composition 2 1 United Federal Assembly 3 Groups 3 1 51st legislature 2019 2023 3 2 50th legislature 2015 2019 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editPrior to the establishment of the federal state in 1848 the only central organ of Switzerland was the Federal Diet Tagsatzung Following the Sonderbund War in 1847 the Tagsatzung became responsible for drawing up the Swiss Federal Constitution 3 The process of formulating legislative power resulted in clashing opinions in particular in relation to the representation of the various cantons the radicals in the majority in the largest cantons pushed for a system where representation was purely proportional to the population of each township the small cantons for their part feared being marginalized After long debates a compromise was found by adopting the American model of bicameralism the parliament will be composed of two chambers with equal power and the agreement of both will be required to take a decision The National Council which represents the people will comprise representatives from each canton with their distribution being proportional to the population of the cantons while the Council of States which represents the cantons will be composed of the same number of representatives from each canton According to the Constitution of 1848 the Federal Assembly is the supreme authority of the Confederation 3 The Tagsatzung accepted the draft constitution in June 1848 On September 12 following the vote of the various cantons it noted that the Constitution had been approved and dissolved itself on September 22 as required by the transitional provisions of the approved text During the month of October 1848 elections were organized in the cantons in order to elect the deputies After a few skirmishes particularly in the canton of Fribourg the results were announced which confirmed the victory of the radicals who won more than three quarters of the seats in the National Council and 30 of the 44 seats in the Council of States On November 16 1848 Parliament elected the first Federal Council 3 In 1874 following the revision of the Constitution and the introduction of extended popular rights the Federal Assembly became the supreme authority of the Confederation subject to the rights of the people and the cantons 3 The organization of the two councils has changed little over time When the National Council was created the total number of seats was 111 3 This number was not fixed and evolved in proportion to the growth of the Swiss population until 1962 when the definitive number of seats was established at 200 the term of office meanwhile was increased from the original three years to four years in 1931 The mode of election originally according to the majority system transitioned to proportional representation in 1918 4 The Council of States meanwhile was not modified until 1979 by adding two new seats for the Canton of Jura which had just been created 3 Composition editThe Federal Assembly is made up of two chambers the National Council with 200 seats and the Council of States with 46 councillors Seats in the National Council are allocated to the cantons proportionally based on population In the Council of States every canton has two seats except for the former half cantons which have one seat each United Federal Assembly edit On occasions the two houses sit jointly as the United Federal Assembly German Vereinigte Bundesversammlung French Assemblee federale Chambres reunies Italian Assemblea federale plenaria Romansh Assamblea federala plenara This is done to elect members of the Federal Council the Federal Chancellor the federal judges or only in times of great national danger a general arbitrate in the event of conflicts between federal authorities issue pardons or listen to special announcementsThe United Federal Assembly is presided by the National Council s presidency The Federal Assembly also confirms the appointment of the Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner appointed by the Federal Council 5 Groups editParties can cooperate in parliamentary groups also called political groups allowing smaller parties access to rights as part of a caucus At least five members from the same Council are needed to form a group Only informal groups exist in the Council of States Members of the National Council are required to be in a formal group in order to be able to sit on a committee 6 Since March 2009 there have been six groups in the Federal Assembly The latest group to form was the Conservative Democratic Party which split off the Swiss People s Party in 2008 The Christian Democrats EPP glp Group CEg was formed after the 2007 elections out of the former Christian Democratic C and EPP E groups The current FTP Liberal group RL was formed in 2003 out of the former FDP R and Liberal L groups since the 2009 fusion of the Free Democratic and Liberal Parties RL is once again a single party group In 2011 the CEg was disbanded the Green Liberals formed their own parliamentary group GL and the three Christian parties formed the Christian Evangelical Group CE 51st legislature 2019 2023 edit Currently for the legislative period of 2019 2023 the six parliamentary groups are composed as follows Group Parties NC CS TotalPeople s parliamentary group V Swiss People s Party 53 6 62Ticino League 1 0Federal Democratic Union 1 0Independent 0 1Social Democrats parliamentary group S Social Democratic Party 39 8 47Centre parliamentary group CVP EVP BDP M CEB Christian Democratic People s Party 25 14 45Conservative Democratic Party 3 0Evangelical People s Party 3 0FDP The Liberals parliamentary group RL FDP The Liberals 29 12 41Green parliamentary group G Green Party 28 5 35Swiss Party of Labour 1 0Solidarity 1 0Green Liberal parliamentary group GL Green Liberal Party 16 0 1650th legislature 2015 2019 edit After the 2015 federal election the Federal Assembly was composed of 7 groups 7 Group Parties NC CS Total PresidentV Swiss People s Party groupFraktion der Schweizerischen Volkspartei Groupe de l Union Democratique du Centre SVP UDC 69 Lega 2 MCR 1 Ind 2 68 6 74 Thomas AeschiS Social Democratic groupSozialdemokratische fraction Groupe socialiste SP PS 42 12 54 Roger NordmannRL FDP Liberal Radical groupFDP Liberale fraktion Groupe Liberal Radical FDP PLR 33 12 45 Beat WaltiC CVP groupCVP fraktion Groupe PDC CVP PDC 40 EVP PEV 2 CSP OW 1 29 14 43 Filippo LombardiG Greens groupGrune fraktion Groupe des Verts Greens 12 PdA PST 1 12 1 13 Balthasar GlattliBD BDP groupBDP fraktion Groupe PBD BDP PBD 7 1 8 Rosmarie QuadrantiGL Green liberal groupGrunliberale fraktion Groupe Vert Liberal GLP PVL 8 0 8 Tiana Angelina MoserGroups VacantV S RL C G BD GLOpening 74 55 45 43 13 8 7 02019 05 29 a 54 82019 06 03 b 42 1 National Councillor Daniel Frei leaves the SP and joins the GLP National Councillor Daniel Fassler is elected to the Council of States and remains in the C group but the canton of Appenzell Innerhoden decides to not fill his National Council seat which is left vacant until the federal electionSee also edit2023 Swiss federal election 2019 Swiss federal election 2015 Swiss federal election 2011 Swiss federal election 2007 Swiss federal election Hotel Bellevue Palace Federal Diet of Switzerland Parliament Act Switzerland Parliamentary Services Switzerland Notes and references edit German Bundesversammlung French Assemblee federale Italian Assemblea federale Romansh Assamblea federala Parlament Parlement Parlamento a b c d e f Graf Martin Martin Pierre G 2 December 2015 Assemblee federale Dictionnaire Historique de la Suisse in German Retrieved 23 April 2022 Initiative populaire Election proportionnelle du Conseil national Chancellerie federale ChF Retrieved 23 April 2022 Federal Act on Data Protection of 19 June 1992 status as of 1 January 2014 Federal Chancellery of Switzerland page visited on 18 September 2016 Parliamentary groups www parlament ch Retrieved 11 December 2019 permanent dead link Les groupes parlementaires de l Assemblee federale depuis la 46e legislature parlament ch Retrieved 11 September 2022 Bibliography editFederal Chancellor Corina Casanova ed 28 April 2015 The Swiss Confederation A Brief Guide 2015 Berne Switzerland Swiss Federal Chancellery FCh of the Swiss Confederation archived from the original PDF on 21 January 2016 retrieved 4 January 2016External links editOfficial website Federal Assembly in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Portals nbsp Politics nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Assembly Switzerland amp oldid 1217699956, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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