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Federal Parliamentary Assembly

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Legislative body of Ethiopia
Federal Parliamentary Assembly
የፌዴራል ፓርላማ ምክር ቤት
Image of the interior of the House of Peoples' Representatives
Logo
Type
TypeBicameral
HousesUpper house (House of Federation)
Lower house (House of Peoples' Representatives)
History
Founded1995
Preceded byNational Shengo
Leadership
Speaker of the House of FederationAgegnehu Teshager
Speaker of the House of Peoples' RepresentativesTagesse Chafo
Meeting place
Ethiopian Parliament Building
Website
House of People's Representatives
House of Federation
Politics of Ethiopia
  • Constitution
  • Presidency
Executive
Legislature
Judiciary
Elections
Administrative divisions
Foreign relations


Related topics

The Federal Parliamentary Assembly (Amharic: የፌዴራል ፓርላማ ምክር ቤት, romanizedYe-Fēdēralawī Parilama Mikir Bēt) is the federal legislature of Ethiopia. It consists of two chambers:

Created with the adoption of the Ethiopian Constitution of 1995, the Parliament replaced the National Shengo as the legislative branch of the Ethiopian government.

History

Under the 1931 constitution

The Imperial Parliament of Ethiopia was first convened by Emperor Haile Selassie in 1931, although it was largely an advisory and feudal body, and was consolidated under the 1931 constitution. The bi-cameral, equal-numbered parliament consisted of the upper Senate (composed largely of nobility, the aristocracy, ministers, Distinguished Veterans and military commanders) and the lower Chamber of Deputies (constituting members chosen by the Emperor, the nobility and the aristocrats).

It was interrupted by the Italian invasion in 1936, and did not meet again until after 1941. By 1955, elders in the districts largely elected the landed aristocrats to the Senate.

Under the 1955 constitution

The 1955 constitution introduced new arrangements to the parliament, including the election of members to the Chamber of Deputies as well as the growth of the lower house to 250 members as opposed to the 125 members of the Senate by 1974. However, deputies largely consisted of feudal lords, rich merchants and high-level members of the civil service. Real power remained in the hands of the Emperor. The parliament would meet in five sessions from 1955 to 1974.

Under the Derg and PDRE

When the monarchy was overthrown, parliament was replaced with a transitional assembly of 60 select members from government institutions and provinces from 1974 to 1975, after which the government largely operated by decree through the military junta headed by Mengistu Haile Mariam. The period without some semblance of a legislature ended in 1987, when the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia was established under a new constitution drafted by Mengistu and the Workers' Party of Ethiopia (WPE).

The new Constitution established an 835-member legislature, the National Shengo (National Council), as the highest organ of state power. Its members were elected to five-year terms. Executive power was vested in a president, elected by the Shengo for a five-year term, and a cabinet also appointed by the Shengo. The president was chairman of the Council of State, which acted for the legislature between sessions. Actual power, however, rested in the WPE (and particularly with Mengistu), defined as the leading force of state and society. The National Shengo, while nominally vested with great lawmaking powers, actually did little more than rubber-stamp decisions made by Mengistu and the WPE.

Under the FDRE

Following Mengistu's overthrow in 1991, the Shengo was abolished, and a period of transition lasted until 1995, when a new legislature was inaugurated under the new constitution.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Elections During the Reign of Emperor Haile Selassie" (PDF). Archived from the original on 9 June 2011.

Further reading

External links

National bicameral legislatures
Federal
Unitary
Dependent and
other territories
Non-UN states
Historical
Related
Legislatures in Africa
Sovereign states
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autonomies,
other territories
Italics indicate an unrecognised or partially recognised state.
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