Parliament of Albania

Parliament of Albania
Kuvendi i Shqipërisë
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Structure
Seats 140
Current Structure of the Assembly of the Republic of Albania
Political groups
Elections
Closed party-list proportional representation
D'hondt method
Last election
25 June 2017
Next election
2021
Meeting place
Website
Official Website
Footnotes
For current list of members see list of members.

The Parliament of Albania (Albanian: Kuvendi i Shqipërisë) or Kuvendi is the unicameral representative body of the citizens of the Republic of Albania; it is Albania's legislature. The Parliament is composed of not less than 140 members elected to a four-year term on the basis of direct, universal, periodic and equal suffrage by secret ballot.[1][2][3] The Parliament is presided over by a Speaker of the Parliament, who is assisted by at least one deputy speaker. The electoral system is based on party-list proportional representation. There are 12 multi-seat constituencies, corresponding to the country's administrative divisions.

The Parliament's powers are defined by the Constitution of Albania. It is responsible to amend the borders of Albania or the Constitution, passes all laws, approves the cabinet, supervises the work of the government, declares war, decides on cessation of hostilities, adopt the state's budgets and approve the state's accounts. Another duties includes, calling referenda, performs elections and appointments conforming to the constitution and applicable legislation, supervises operations of the government and other civil services responsible to the parliament, grants amnesty for criminal offences and performs other duties defined by the constitution. The Parliament also elect the President of the Republic. When the Parliament is elected, the first session shall be held no later than 20 days after the completion of elections with the President as the speaker.[4] However, all laws passed by the Parliament are published by the Albanian Official Journal (Albanian: Fletorja Zyrtare), which is the official journal of the Government of Albania.[5]

The oldest Parliament with extant records was held in Lezhë on 2 March 1444. The League of Lezhë (Kuvëndi i Lezhës) forged in Lezhë under Gjergj Kastrioti Skënderbeu as the leader against the Ottoman Empire.[6]

History of the Parliament

Modern

The legislative system in Albania has evolved under many different regimes, most notably in the period before 1947. From 1920 to 1923, Albania's legislature was known as the National Council (Albanian: Këshillit Kombëtar).[7] During the period of the Albanian Republic, the country had a bicameral legislature, consisting of a Senate (Albanian: Senatit) and a Chamber of Deputies (Albanian: Dhomës së Deputetëve).[7] From 1928 to 1939, during the era of the first iteration of the Albanian Kingdom Albania's legislature was known simply as the Parliament (Albanian: Parlamentit).[7]

During the Italian occupation of Albania and the existence of the 1939 Albanian Kingdom, Albania's legislature was known as the Supreme Fascist Cooperative (Albanian: Epërm Fashist Koorporativ).[7] From 1943 to 1944, during Nazi occupation of Albania and the formation of the 1943 Albanian Kingdom, Albania's legislature was known as the National Assembly (Albanian: Kuvendit Kombëtar).[7] From 1944 to late 1945, a National Anti-fascist Liberation Council (Albanian: Këshilli Antifashist Nacional çlirimtar) was formed by politicians opposing the Nazi puppet government.[8]

Later during multiple periods of regime changes, Albania's legislature was known as the Constituent Assembly (Albanian: Asamblesë Kushtetuese or Kuvendit Kushtetuese). This occurred in 1924, prior to the formation of the Albanian Republic, in 1928, prior to the formation of the first iteration of the Albanian Kingdom, and from 1946 to 1947, prior during the era Democratic Government of Albania and prior to the formation of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania.[7]

Recent

From 1947 to 1999, during the era of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania, Albania's legislature was known as the People's Assembly (Albanian: Kuvendit Popullor).[7] Since 1997, the parliament has been known simply as the Parliament (Albanian: Kuvendit të RSH).[7][lower-alpha 1] Currently the President is elected by the parliament. The current members were chosen in the 2017 Albanian parliamentary election.

Powers, duties and responsibilities

The Parliament's powers are defined by the Constitution of Albania. The Parliament represents the citizens of the Republic of Albania, it acts as the country's legislature. It convenes regularly in two sessions each year, the first session on the third Monday of January and the second session on the first Monday of September.[12] However, extraordinary sessions may be called by the President of Albania, the Prime Minister of Albania or by one-fifth of the parliamentary members.[13] Further the sessions are open to the public.[14] The parliament decides through a majority votes, in the presence of more than half of its members, except for cases where the constitution provides for a qualified majority. However, decisions are made by three-fifhts majority votes.[15]

Other powers of the parliament include defining economic, legal and political relations in Albania; preservation of Albania's natural and cultural heritage and its utilisation; and forming alliances with other nations. The parliament elect the President by secret ballot and without debate by three-fifths of the parliamentary members. The president addresses messages to the Parliament and sets the date of parliamentary elections, for the organs of local power and for the conduct of referenda. The president appoints the Prime Minister on the proposal of the parliament; if the Prime Minister is not approved, the tarliament elects another Prime Minister within 10 days. As specified by the Constitution, no foreign military force may be situated in, or pass through, the borders of Albania, except by a law approved by the parliament. Due to that, it has the right to deploy Albanian Armed Forces outside its borders.[16]

Election

The 140 members of the Parliament serve four-year terms, with elections held every four years, or earlier in the relatively rare case that the Parliament is dissolved prematurely by the President.[17] 100 members are elected directly.[18] Elections for the Parliament are held 60 to 30 days before the end of the mandate and not later than 45 days after its dissolution. The seats of the Parliament are elected in a 12 constituency by closed list proportional representation. Seats are allocated using the d'Hondt method with a 2.5% electoral threshold. The Parliament can be dissolved by the President on the recommendation of the Prime Minister if the latter has lost a vote of confidence in the Parliament, if the recommendation is made and accepted before the Parliament acts to elect a new Prime Minister.[19]

Speaker of the Parliament

The Chairperon of the Parliament is the presiding officer of the Parliament and is elected by the members of the Parliament. It's term coincides with the term of the Parliament. The official function is to moderate debate, make rulings on procedure, announce the results of votes, decides who may speak and has the powers to discipline members who break the procedures of the chamber or house. If the President is temporarily absent or incapable of exercising its powers, the Chairperson takes over his functions, as specified by the Constitution.[20]

Although, Albania has always had a Chairperson since 1920. Since the first multi-party elections held after the collapse of the Communist rule, there have been seven speakers of the Parliament. As of 10 September 2013, Ilir Meta (LSI) is the seventh Chairperson of the Parliament.

Name From To Party
Kastriot Islami 17 April 1991 6 April 1992 PS
Pjetër Arbnori 6 April 1992 24 July 1997 PD
Skënder Gjinushi 24 July 1997 4 September 2001 PSD
Namik Dokle 4 September 2001 30 April 2002 PS
Servet Pëllumbi 30 April 2002 3 September 2005 PS
Jozefina Topalli 3 September 2005 10 September 2013 PD
Ilir Meta 10 September 2013 24 July 2017 LSI
Valentina Leskaj 24 July 2017 Incumbent PS

Composition of the Parliament

The Constitution of Albania mandates that the Parliament consists of not less than 140 members, elected by a direct elected secret ballot for four-year terms. The electoral system is closed list proportional representation. There are 12 multi-member constituencies corresponding to the 12 administrative regions of the country. Parliamentary elections are held within 60 days to 30 days before the end of the mandate and not later than 45 days after dissolution.

As specified by the current electoral legislation in Albania, 140 members of the Parliament are elected in multi-seat constituencies. Within any constituency, parties must meet a threshold of 3 percent of votes, and pre-election coalitions must meet a threshold of 5 percent of votes.[21][22]

17th Parliament

The two largest political parties in Albania are the Socialist Party of Albania (PS) and the Democratic Party of Albania (PD). The last elections were held on 25 June 2017. Following is a list of political parties with representation in the Parliament.

Logo Name Abbr. Leader Ideology MPs
Socialist Party of Albania
Partia Socialiste e Shqipërisë
PS Edi Rama Social democracy, Third Way, Progressive, Centre-left, Western, Modernism, Social liberalism
74 / 140
Democratic Party of Albania
Partia Demokratike e Shqipërisë
PD Lulzim Basha Liberal conservatism, Conservatism, Nationalism, Pro-Europeanism, Centre-right, Economic liberalism
43 / 140
Socialist Movement for Integration
Lëvizja Socialiste për Intigrim
LSI Ilir Meta Social democracy, Progressivism, Centre-left
19 / 140
Party for Justice, Integration and Unity
Partia për Drejtësi, Integrim dhe Unitet
PDIU Shpëtim Idrizi Nationalism, Right-wing, Ethnic nationalism, Cham issue
3 / 140
Social Democratic Party of Albania
Partia Socialdemokrate e Shqipërisë
PSD Skënder Gjinushi Social democracy, Centre-left
1 / 140

Committees of the Parliament

Parliamentary committees investigate specific matters of policy or government administration or performance that cannot be directly handled by the Parliament due to their volume. The committees provide an opportunity for organisations and individuals to participate in policy making and to have their views placed on the public record and considered as part of the decision-making process.

The Parliament has the following committees:[23]

See also

Notes

  1. A direct dictionary translation would be "Assembly."[9][10] However, the Albanian government uses the translation "Parliament."[11]

References

  1. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA" (PDF). osce.org. p. 12. Article 64 - 1. The Assembly consists of 140 deputies. One hundred deputies are elected directly in single member electoral zones with an approximately equal number of voters. Forty deputies are elected from multi-name lists of parties or party coalitions according to their ranking
  2. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA" (PDF). osce.org. p. 1. Article 1 - 3.: Governance is based on a system of elections that are free, equal, general and periodic.
  3. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA" (PDF). osce.org. p. 1. Article 2 - 1 & 2.: Sovereignty in the Republic of Albania belongs to the people.; The people exercise sovereignty through their representatives or directly.
  4. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA" (PDF). osce.org. p. Article 67.
  5. "CRL Foreign Official Gazette Database - Albania". apps.crl.edu.
  6. "Kuvendi i Lezhës (1444)". letersia.fajtori.com (in Albanian).
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Leaders over the years". parlament.al. Albanian Parliament. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  8. "Kronologji e legjislaturave në Shqipëri (Chronology of legislatures in Albania)" (in Albanian). Albanian Parliament. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  9. Hysa, Ramazan (2003). Albanian-English, English-Albanian Standard Dictionary. New York, NY: Hippocrene Books. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-7818-0979-5.
  10. Leonard, Newmark, ed. (1999). Albanian-English Dictionary. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 431–432. ISBN 0-19-860322-3.
  11. "Republic of Albania Parliament". Albanian Parliament. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  12. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 14. The Assembly conducts its annual work in two sessions. The first session begins on the third Monday of January and the second session on the first Monday of September
  13. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. The Assembly meets in extraordinary session when requested by the President of the Republic, the Prime Minister or by one-fifth of all the deputies
  14. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 15. Meetings of the Assembly are open.
  15. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 15. There are approved by three-fifths of all members of the Assembly
  16. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 3. No foreign military force may be situated in, or pass through, the Albanian territory, and no Albanian military force may be sent abroad, except by a law approved by a majority of all members of the Assembly.
  17. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 12. The Assembly is elected for four years.
  18. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 12. One hundred deputies are elected directly in single member electoral zones with an approximately equal number of voters. Forty deputies are elected from multi-name lists of parties or party coalitions according to their ranking
  19. "1998 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA". osce.org. p. 19. If the Assembly fails to elect a new Prime Minister, the President of the Republic dissolves the Assembly.
  20. "KUSHTETUTA E REPUBLIKËS SË SHQIPËRISË" (PDF) (in Albanian). p. Article 94.
  21. "IFES Election Guide - Country Profile: Albania". www.electionguide.org. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  22. "PART XII ALLOCATION OF SEATS". THE ELECTORAL CODE OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA (English translation by OSCE) (pdf). p. 140. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  23. "Komisionet". parlament.al (in Albanian).

Coordinates: 41°19′34″N 19°49′23″E / 41.32611°N 19.82306°E / 41.32611; 19.82306

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