Parliament of the Czech Republic

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Parliament of the Czech Republic

Parlament České republiky
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
HousesSenate
Chamber of Deputies
History
Founded1 January 1993
Preceded byCzech National Council
Federal Assembly
Leadership
Miloš Vystrčil, ODS
since 20 January 2020
Markéta Pekarová Adamová, TOP 09
since 10 November 2021
Structure
Seats281
81 Senators
200 Deputies
Senate political groups
Government (60)
  •   SPOLU (39)
  •   PirStan (21)

Confidence and supply (11)

Opposition (10)

Chamber of Deputies political groups
Government (108)

Opposition (92)

Elections
Two-round system
Proportional representation
Last Senate election
2–3 October 2020 &
9–10 October 2020
Last Chamber of Deputies election
8–9 October 2021
Meeting place
Palaces in Malá Strana, Prague
Website
Senate
Chamber of Deputies

The Parliament of the Czech Republic (Czech: Parlament České republiky) or just Parliament (Czech: Parlament) is the legislative body of the Czech Republic, seated in Malá Strana, Prague.

It consists of two chambers, both elected in direct elections:

Art. 15 of the Constitution stipulates its name as the "Parliament".[1] The Parliament exercises competences usual in parliamentary systems: it holds and passes bills, has the right to modify the Constitution, ratifies international agreements; if necessary, it declares war, approves presence of foreign military forces in the Czech Republic or a dispatch of Czech military forces abroad.

History

Session room of the Chamber of Deputies

The tradition of modern parliamentarianism in the Bohemian lands dates back to times of the Austrian Empire (and then Cisleithanian part of Austria-Hungary), where the Imperial Council (Reichsrat, Říšská rada) was created in 1861.

After proclamation of Czechoslovakia in 1918 its National Assembly (Národní shromáždění) undertook legislative duties both of the Imperial Council and State Diets (Bohemian, Moravian, Silesian).[2] In 1938–39 and between 1948–89 there existed a parliament within non-democratic regimes (right-wing authoritarian or Communist regime, respectively). As a consequence of federalization of Czechoslovakia (1968), national councils of Czech and Slovak parts of the country were created.

The Chamber of Deputies keeps continuity with the Czech National Council (Česká národní rada), while the Senate was established in 1996 (with reference to the First Czechoslovak Republic one).

External links

References

  1. ^ "The Constitution of the Czech Republic". Prague Castle. 2015. Retrieved 2017-05-25.
  2. ^ Balík, S.-Hloušek, V.-Holzer, J.-Šedo, J.: Politický systém českých zemí 1848-1989. Brno 2006, p. 81.