House of Representatives
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House of Representatives is the name of legislative bodies in many countries and sub-national entities. In many countries, the House of Representatives is the lower house of a bicameral legislature, with the corresponding upper house often called a "Senate". In some countries, the House of Representatives is the sole chamber of a unicameral legislature.
The functioning of a house of representatives can vary greatly from country to country, and depends on whether a country has a parliamentary or a presidential system. Members of a House of Representatives are typically apportioned according to population rather than geography.
The United States House of Representatives, first convened in 1789, was closely patterned on the House of Commons of Great Britain.[1] It retains features such as a speaker of the house who is the presiding officer.[1]
National legislatures
[edit]"The House of Representatives" currently is the name of a house of the legislature in the following countries:
In the following countries it is the sole chamber in a unicameral system:
Country | English name | Local name |
---|---|---|
Cyprus | House of Representatives | Greek: Βουλή των Αντιπροσώπων (Vouli Antiprosópon) Turkish: Temsilciler Meclisi |
Iraq | Council of Representatives of Iraq | Arabic: مجلس النواب العراقي (Majlis Al-Niwab Al-Iraqi) Kurdish: ئهنجومهنی نوێنهران (Enjumen-e Nûnerên) |
Libya | House of Representatives | Arabic: مجلس النواب (Majlis an-Nuwwab) |
Malta | House of Representatives | Maltese: Kamra tad-Deputati |
New Zealand | New Zealand House of Representatives | Māori: Whare o ngā Māngai |
Tunisia | Assembly of the Representatives of the People | Arabic: مجلس نواب الشعب (Majless Noweb al Shaab) French: Assemblée des représentants du peuple, ARP |
The Indonesian People's Representative Council (Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat, DPR), the Dewan Rakyat of the Parliament of Malaysia and the Dáil Éireann of the Irish Oireachtas are all sometimes called "House of Representatives" in English.
Subnational legislatures
[edit]House of Representatives is the title of most, but not all, of the lower houses of U.S. state legislatures, with the exceptions usually called "State Assembly", "General Assembly", or more rarely, "House of Delegates".
In Germany, the Landtag parliament of the city and state of Berlin, the Abgeordnetenhaus, is known in English as the House of Representatives.
In Tanzania, the semi-autonomous islands of Zanzibar has its own legislative body, the Zanzibar House of Representatives.
The legislature of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Bosniak-Croat majority federal entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina, mirrors the State parliament, with the lower house designated as the Federal House of Representatives.
Defunct Houses of Representatives
[edit]From 1867 until 1918, in Cisleithania, the Austrian part of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the lower house of the Imperial Council (Reichsrat) parliament, the Abgeordnetenhaus was generally known in English as "House of Representatives". Since 1855 the lower house in the Landtag of Prussia was called Abgeordnetenhaus, as distinct from the upper House of Lords.
In 1934, the Nebraska voters approved a unicameral legislature dissolving the House of Representatives and transferring its powers to the Senate.
The Kenyan House of Representatives was combined with the Senate in 1966, to form an enlarged single chamber parliament, known as the National Assembly. The Senate was re-established as an upper house following the 2010 Kenyan constitutional referendum.
Under the First and Second Republics, the National Assembly of South Korea was officially bicameral, consisting of the House of Councillors and House of Representatives. In practice, however, the National Assembly was unicameral under the First Republic, as the first election of the House of Councillors was not held until the Second Republic was founded in 1960. Following a military coup the following year, the National Assembly was dissolved. Since its restoration in December 1963, the National Assembly has been unicameral.
The House of Representatives of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) was the lower chamber of the parliament established in 1947 according to the Soulbury Constitution. The 1972 First Republican Constitution of Sri Lanka replaced it with the unicameral National State Assembly.
The Parliament of Sierra Leone, like its counterparts in other former British colonies, began as a Legislative Council. It was inaugurated in 1863 but was renamed the House of Representatives in 1954.
Following the surrender of South Vietnam to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces in 1975, a Provisional Revolutionary Government established itself in Saigon and disbanded the bicameral National Assembly consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Under apartheid, the House of Representatives was the house for South Africa's mixed race 'Coloured' community, in the Tricameral Parliament of 1984 to 1994.
In 1994 the House of Representatives of the Gambia was dissolved in a coup d'état led by Yahya Jammeh. It was replaced as the legislature by the National Assembly according to the 1997 Constitution of The Gambia.
The House of Representatives of Fiji was the lower chamber of Fiji's Parliament from 1970 to 2006. It was suspended by the 2006 military coup. The 2013 Constitution abolished it and replaced it with a single chamber Parliament.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Literally, "People's Hall"
References
[edit]- ^ a b Critchlow, Donald T.; VanderMeer, Philip R., eds. (2013). "HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES". The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Political and Legal History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199754625.