Parliament of Lebanon

Legislature of Lebanon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parliament of Lebanonmap

The Lebanese Parliament (Arabic: مجلس النواب, romanized: Majlis an-Nuwwab, lit.'House of Representatives', French: Chambre des députés, lit.'Chamber of Deputies')[16] is the unicameral national parliament of the Republic of Lebanon. There are 128 members elected to a four-year term in multi-member constituencies, apportioned among Lebanon's diverse Christian and Muslim denominations but with half of the seats reserved for Christians and half for Muslims per Constitutional Article 24.[17] Lebanon has universal adult suffrage. The parliament's major functions are to elect the President of the republic, to approve the government (although appointed by the President, the Prime Minister, along with the Cabinet, must retain the confidence of a majority in the Parliament), and to approve laws and expenditure.

Quick Facts Lebanese Parliamentمجلس النواب اللبنانيChambre des députés, Type ...
Lebanese Parliament
مجلس النواب اللبناني
Chambre des députés
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Type
Type
Leadership
Nabih Berri, Amal Movement
since 28 October 1992
Elias Bou Saab, Independent
since 31 May 2022
Secretaries
Alain Aoun, Independent
Hadi Aboul Hosn, PSP
since 31 May 2022
Structure
Seats128
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Political groups
Government (64)
  Strong Republic (19)[1]

Supported by (47)

  National Compatibility (5)[7]
  Human Homeland Project (3)[10]
  Change Alliance Bloc (3)[13]

  PNO (1)
  Independents (10)

Opposition (17)

  ReLebanon (1)[o]
  Islamic Group (1)
  Independents (2)[p]
Elections
Party list proportional representation with seats allocated by religion
Last election
15 May 2022
Next election
2026
Meeting place
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Lebanese Parliament, Beirut, Lebanon
Website
lp.gov.lb
Footnotes
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    The Parliament was most recently elected on 15 May 2022. While terms are four years long, parliaments are able to extend the own terms: the parliament elected in June 2009 did so on three separate occasions, delaying the next election until May 2018 while a new electoral law was prepared. According to the Lebanese constitution[18] and the electoral law of 2017,[19] elections are held on a Sunday during the 60 days preceding the end of the sitting parliament's mandate, with the next one due on a Sunday falling between 22 March 2026 and 22 May 2026.

    Allocation of seats

    Summarize
    Perspective

    A unique feature of the Lebanese system is the principle of "confessional distribution": each religious community has an allotted number of deputies in the Parliament in a form of consociationalism.

    In elections held between 1932 and 1972, seats were apportioned between Christians and Muslims in a 6:5 ratio, with various denominations of the two faiths allocated representation roughly proportional to their size. By the 1960s, Muslims had become openly dissatisfied with this system, aware that their own higher birthrate and the higher emigration rate among Christians had by this time almost certainly produced a Muslim majority, which the parliamentary distribution did not reflect. Christian politicians were unwilling to abolish or alter the system, however, and it was one of the factors in the 1975–1990 civil war. The Taif Agreement of 1989, which ended the civil war, reapportioned the Parliament to provide for equal representation of Christians and Muslims, with each electing 64 of the 128 deputies.

    Although distributed confessionally, all members, regardless of their religious faith, are elected by universal suffrage, forcing politicians to seek support from outside of their own religious communities, unless their co-religionists overwhelmingly dominate their particular constituency.

    The changes stipulated by the Taif Agreement of 1989 are set out in the table below:

    More information Confession, Before Taif ...
    Parliament of Lebanon seat allocation
    Confession Before Taif After Taif
    Maronite Catholic3034
    Eastern Orthodox1114
    Melkite Catholic68
    Armenian Orthodox45
    Armenian Catholic11
    Protestant11
    Other Christian minorities11
    Total Christians5464
    Sunni2027
    Shi'ite1927
    Alawite02
    Druze68
    Total Muslims + Druze4564
    Total99128
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    More information Electoral district under 2017 Election Law, Seats ...
    Electoral district under 2017 Election Law
    Seats
    Beirut I (East Beirut)8111311
    Beirut II (West Beirut)1162111
    Bekaa I (Zahle)7111121
    Bekaa II (West Bekaa-Rachaya)621111
    Bekaa III (Baalbek-Hermel)102611
    Mount Lebanon I (Byblos-Kesrwan)817
    Mount Lebanon II (Metn)84211
    Mount Lebanon III (Baabda)6213
    Mount Lebanon IV (Aley-Chouf)1324511
    North I (Akkar)73112
    North II (Tripoli-Minnieh-Dennieh)118111
    North III (Bcharre-Zghorta-Batroun-Koura)1073
    South I (Saida-Jezzine)5221
    South II (Zahrany-Tyre)761
    South III (Marjaayoun-Nabatieh-Hasbaya-Bint Jbeil)111811
    Total128272782341485111
    Source: 961News
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    Members

    Political parties

    Numerous political parties exist in Lebanon. Many parties are little more than ad hoc electoral lists, formed by negotiation among influential local figures representing the various confessional communities; these lists usually function only for the purpose of the election, and do not form identifiable groupings in the parliament subsequently. Other parties are personality-based, often comprising followers of a present or past political leader or warlord. Few parties are based, in practice, on any particular ideology, although in theory most claim to be.

    No single party has ever won more than 12.5 percent of the total number of seats in the Parliament, and until 2005 no coalition ever won more than a third of the total. The general election held in 2005, however, resulted in a clear majority (72 seats out of 128) being won by the alliance led by Saad Hariri (son of murdered former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri); half of these were held by Hariri's own Future Movement.

    Speaker

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    Nabih Berri, incumbent speaker
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    Elias Bou Saab, incumbent deputy speaker

    The Speaker of the Parliament, who by custom must be a Shi'a Muslim, is now elected to a four-year term, and is the highest office in the parliament.[20] Prior to the Taif Agreement, they were elected to a two-year term. They form part of a "troika", together with the President (required to be a Maronite Christian) and the Prime Minister (a Sunni Muslim). The privileges of the Speaker are unusually powerful, relative to other democratic systems. The current speaker is the leader of the Amal Party, Nabih Berri.[21]

    Deputy Speaker

    The Deputy Speaker of the Parliament of Lebanon is the second highest-ranking official of the Lebanese Parliament. The office is always attributed to a Greek Orthodox practitioner.[22]

    Parliamentary committees

    Summarize
    Perspective

    The Lebanese parliament has sixteen committees to facilitate the legislative process and provide oversight on specific areas of government policy.[23] The Finance and Budget Committee is considered the most important, as it reviews the government's budget and spending plans. Other influential committees include Administration and Justice, Health and Labor, and Economy and Industry.

    List of committees:[24]

    • Administration and Justice Committee (Chairman: Georges Adwan - LF)
    • Finance and Budget Committee (Chairman: Ibrahim Kanaan - FPM)
    • Foreign and Expatriate Affairs Committee (Chairman: Fadi Alameh - Amal Movement)
    • Public Works and Energy Committee (Chairman: Sajeeh Ateya - Independent)
    • Education and Culture Committee (Chairman: Hassan Mrad - Union Party)
    • Public Health, Labor, and Social Affairs Committee (Chairman: Bilal Abdullah - PSP)
    • Defense, Interior, and Municipal Affairs Committee (Chairman: Jihad Al Samad - Independent)
    • Displaced Affairs Committee (Chairman: Hagop Pakradounian - Tashnag)
    • Agriculture and Tourism Committee (Chairman: Ayoub Hmayed - Amal Movement)
    • Environment Committee (Chairman: Ghayyath Yazbek - Lebanese Forces)
    • Economy, Industry, and Planning Committee (Chairman: Michel Daher - Independent)
    • Media and Telecommunications Committee (Chairman: Ibrahim Al Moussawi - Hezbollah)
    • Youth and Sports Committee (Chairman: Simon Abi Ramia - Independent)
    • Human Rights Committee (Chairman: Michel Moussa - Amal Movement)
    • Women and Children Committee (Chairman: Inaya Ezzedine - Amal Movement)
    • Information Technology Committee (Chairman: Tony Frangieh - Marada)

    Electoral system

    According to the Lebanese constitution[25] and the electoral law of 2017,[26] elections are held on a Sunday during the 60 days preceding the end of the sitting parliament's mandate. In June 2017 a new electoral law was passed. While in the previous system, the 128 members of parliament were elected from 26 multi-member constituencies under plurality block voting, and the candidates with the highest number of votes within each religious community were elected,[27] the new electoral law instituted proportional representation in 15 multi-member constituencies while still maintaining the confessional distribution.[28] However, the 7 out of the 15 of the electoral districts are divided into 2 or more 'minor districts' (largely corresponding to the smaller electoral districts from the old electoral law).[29] Where applicable, preference vote is counted on the 'minor district' level.[30]

    Parliament building

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    Lebanese Parliament Building 1947

    The Parliament building was designed by Mardiros Altounian, who was also the architect of the Étoile clock tower. The building was completed in 1934 during the French Mandate period. Advised to build in the spirit of Lebanese tradition, the architect visited the Emirs' palaces in the Chouf Mountains. He also drew inspiration from the Oriental styles developed in Paris, Istanbul and Cairo at the turn of the 20th century.

    See also

    Notes

    1. Jihad Pakradouni, Ziad Hawat, Ghada Ayoub, Razi el Hajj
    2. Melhem Houjairi, Yanal Solh
    3. Marwan Hamadeh, Ragy el Saad
    4. Adib Abdelmassih
    5. Najat Aoun
    6. Melhem Khalaf, Elias Jaradeh, Firas Hamdan, Yassin Yassin
    7. Ihab Matar, Ahmad Rustom, Mohamad Sleiman, Sagih Attieh, Walid Baarini, Abdulaziz el Samaz, Ahmed Al Khair
    8. Mohammad Yehya
    9. Farid Haykal Khazen, William Tawk
    10. MP Nabil Badr is affiliated with Human Homeland Project bloc but abstained on giving confidence to the government.
    11. Mark Daou
    12. Michel Doueihy
    13. Farid Boustani
    14. Affiliated with Forces of Change but voted against confidence in the government.
    15. Jamil Al Sayyed and Haidar Nasser abstained on giving confidence to the government.

    References

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