National Assembly (Malawi)

The National Assembly of Malawi is the supreme legislative body of the nation. It is situated on Capital Hill, Lilongwe along Presidential Way. The National Assembly alone possesses legislative supremacy and thereby ultimate power over all other political bodies in Malawi. At its head is the Speaker of the House who is elected by his or her peers.[2] Since June 19, 2019 the Speaker is Catherine Gotani Hara.

National Assembly
Type
Type
Lower House[nb 1]
(de facto Unicameral)
History
Founded26 May 1964
New session started
June 2019
Leadership
Speaker
Catherine Gotani Hara, MCP
since 19 June 2019
Structure
Seats193
Political groups
     DPP (62)

     MCP (55)
     UDF (10)
     UTM (5)
     PP (5)
     AFORD (1)
     Independent (55)

     Vacant (1)
Length of term
5 years
Elections
First-past-the-post
Last election
21 May 2019
Meeting place
Lilongwe
Website
www.parliament.gov.mw

The 1994 Constitution provided for a Senate but Parliament repealed it. Malawi therefore has a unicameral legislature in practice.[2] The National Assembly has 193 Members of Parliament (MPs) who are directly elected in single-member constituencies using the simple majority (or first-past-the-post) system and serve five-year terms.[3]

Current Parliament

The current parliament was inaugurated in June 2019 after the 2019 Malawian general election. No party managed to secure a majority in the house. Peter Mutharika won the presidential election, however, due to irregularities the constitutional court ordered a re-run of the presidential elections in 2020.[4] Parliament passed the Parliamentary and Presidential Elections Act (PPEA) Amendment Bill on 24 February 2020, extended the terms of MPs and local councillors by one year to allow for harmonised presidential, parliamentary and local elections in 2025.[5]

See also

Notes

  1. The Constitution Provides for a Senate - In Practice the Senate has not yet been Established; Compare the Federation Council of Iraq.[1]

References

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