Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Parliamentary system of government

A parliamentary system is a system of government wherein the ministers of the executive branch are drawn from the legislature, and are accountable to that body, such that the executive and legislative branches are intertwined. In such a system, the head of government is both de facto chief executive and chief legislator.

Parliamentary systems are characterized by no clear-cut separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches, leading to a different set of checks and balances compared to those found in presidential systems. Parliamentary systems usually have a clear differentiation between the head of government and the head of state, with the head of government being the prime minister or premier, and the head of state often being a figurehead, often either a president (elected either popularly or by the parliament) or a hereditary monarch (often in a constitutional monarchy).

The term parliamentary system does not mean that a country is ruled by different parties in coalition with each other. Such multi-party arrangements are usually the product of an electoral system known as proportional representation. Many parliamentary countries, especially those that use "first past the post" voting, have governments composed of one party. However, parliamentary systems in continental Europe do use proportional representation, and tend to produce election results in which no single party has a majority of seats. Proportional representation in a non-parliamentary system does not have this result (Arguelles, 2009).

Parliamentarianism may also be for governance in local governments. An example is the city of Oslo, which has an executive council as a part of the parliamentary system. The council-manager system of municipal government used in some U.S. cities bears many similarities to a parliamentary system.

Students of democracy such as Arend Lijphart divide parliamentary democracies into two different systems, the Westminster and Consensus systems (See Lijphart 1999 for this section).

The Westminster system, usually found in Commonwealth of Nations countries, although they are not universal within nor exclusive to Commonwealth countries. These parliaments tend to have a more adversarial style of debate and the plenary session of parliament is relatively more important than committees. Some parliaments in this model are elected using a plurality voting system (first past the post), such as the United Kingdom, Canada, and India, while others use proportional representation, such as Ireland and New Zealand. The Australian House of Representatives is elected using instant-runoff voting while the Senate is elected using proportional representation through single transferable vote. Even when proportional representation systems are used, the voting systems tend to allow the voter to vote for a named candidate rather than a party list. This model does allow for a greater separation of powers than the Western European model, since the governing party will often not have a majority in the upper house. However, the extent of the separation of powers is nowhere near that of the presidential system of the United States and some other American nations, such as Mexico.

Western European parliamentary model (e.g., Spain, Germany) tend to have a more consensual debating system, and have semi-cyclical debating chambers. Consensus systems are identified by proportional representation, where there is more of a tendency to use party list systems than the Westminster Model legislatures. The committees of these Parliaments tend to be more important than the plenary chamber. This model is sometimes called the West German Model since its earliest exemplar in its final form was in the Bundestag of West Germany (which became the Bundestag of Germany upon the absorption of the GDR by the FRG). Switzerland is considered one the purest examples of a consensus system.

There also exists a Hybrid Model, the semi-presidential system, drawing on both presidential systems and parliamentary systems, for example the French Fifth Republic. Much of Eastern Europe has adopted this model since the early 1990s.

Implementations of the parliamentary system can also differ on whether the government needs the explicit approval of the parliament to form, rather than just the absence of its disapproval, and under what conditions (if any) the government has the right to dissolve the parliament, like Jamaica and many others.

Advantages of a parliamentary system

Many believe that it is easier to pass legislation within a parliamentary system. This is because the executive branch is dependent upon the direct or indirect support of the legislative branch and often includes members of the legislature. Thus, this would amount to the executive (as the majority party or coalition of parties in the legislature) possessing more votes in order to pass legislation. In a presidential system, the executive is often chosen independently from the legislature. If the executive and legislature in such a system include members entirely or predominantly from different political parties, then stalemate can occur. Former US President Bill Clinton often faced problems in this regard, since the Republicans controlled Congress for much of his tenure. Accordingly, the executive within a presidential system might not be able to properly implement his or her platform/manifesto. Evidently, an executive in any system (be it parliamentary, presidential or semi-presidential) is chiefly voted into office on the basis of his or her party's platform/manifesto. It could be said then that the will of the people is more easily instituted within a parliamentary system.

In addition to quicker legislative action, Parliamentarianism has attractive features for nations that are ethnically, racially, or ideologically divided. In a unipersonal presidential system, all executive power is concentrated in the president. In a parliamentary system, with a collegial executive, power is more divided. In the 1989 Lebanese Taif Agreement, in order to give Muslims greater political power, Lebanon moved from a semi-presidential system with a strong president to a system more structurally similar to a classical parliamentarianism. Iraq similarly disdained a presidential system out of fears that such a system would be tantamount to Shiite domination; Afghanistan's minorities refused to go along with a presidency as strong as the Pashtuns desired.

It can also be argued that power is more evenly spread out in the power structure of parliamentarianism. The premier seldom tends to have as high importance as a ruling president, and there tends to be a higher focus on voting for a party and its political ideas than voting for an actual person.

In The English Constitution, Walter Bagehot praised parliamentarianism for producing serious debates, for allowing the change in power without an election, and for allowing elections at any time. Bagehot considered the four-year election rule of the United States to be unnatural.

There is also a body of scholarship, associated with Juan Linz, Fred Riggs, Bruce Ackerman, and Robert Dahl that claims that parliamentarianism is less prone to authoritarian collapse. These scholars point out that since World War II, two-thirds of Third World countries establishing parliamentary governments successfully made the transition to democracy. By contrast, no Third World presidential system successfully made the transition to democracy without experiencing coups and other constitutional breakdowns. As Bruce Ackerman says of the 30 countries to have experimented with American checks and balances, "All of them, without exception, have succumbed to the nightmare [of breakdown] one time or another, often repeatedly."[citation needed]

A recent World Bank study found that parliamentary systems are associated with lower corruption.

Criticisms of parliamentarianism 

One main criticism of many parliamentary systems is that the head of government is in almost all cases not directly elected. In a presidential system, the president is usually chosen directly by the electorate, or by a set of electors directly chosen by the people, separate from the legislature. However, in a parliamentary system the prime minister is elected by the legislature, often under the strong influence of the party leadership. Thus, a party's candidate for the head of government is usually known before the election, possibly making the election as much about the person as the party behind him or her.

Another major criticism of the parliamentary system lies precisely in its purported advantage: that there is no truly independent body to oppose and veto legislation passed by the parliament, and therefore no substantial check on legislative power. Conversely, because of the lack of inherent separation of powers, some believe that a parliamentary system can place too much power in the executive entity, leading to the feeling that the legislature or judiciary have little scope to administer checks or balances on the executive. However, parliamentary systems are bicameral, with an upper house designed to check the power of the lower (from which the executive comes).

Although it is possible to have a powerful prime minister, as Britain has, or even a dominant party system, as Japan has, parliamentary systems are also sometimes unstable. Critics point to Israel, Italy, Canada, the French Fourth Republic, and Weimar Germany as examples of parliamentary systems where unstable coalitions, demanding minority parties, votes of no confidence, and threats of such votes, make or have made effective governance impossible. Defenders of parliamentarianism say that parliamentary instability is the result of proportional representation, political culture, and highly polarised electorates.

Former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi criticized the parliamentary system of Iraq, saying that because of party-based voting "the vast majority of the electorate based their choices on sectarian and ethnic affiliations, not on genuine political platforms.

Although Walter Bagehot praised parliamentarianism for allowing an election to take place at any time, the lack of a definite election calendar can be abused. In some systems, such as the British, a ruling party can schedule elections when it feels that it is likely to do well, and so avoid elections at times of unpopularity. Thus, by wise timing of elections, in a parliamentary system a party can extend its rule for longer than is feasible in a functioning presidential system. This problem can be alleviated somewhat by setting fixed dates for parliamentary elections, as is the case in several of Australia's state parliaments. In other systems, such as the Dutch and the Belgian, the ruling party or coalition has some flexibility in determining the election date.

Alexander Hamilton argued for elections at set intervals as a means of insulating the government from the transient passions of the people, and thereby giving reason the advantage over passion in the accountability of the government to the people

Critics of parliamentary systems point out that people with significant popular support in the community are prevented from becoming prime minister if they cannot get elected to parliament since there is no option to "run for prime minister" like one can run for president under a presidential system. Additionally, prime ministers may lose their positions solely because they lose their seats in parliament, even though they may still be popular nationally. Supporters of parliamentarianism can respond by saying that as members of parliament, prime ministers are elected firstly to represent their electoral constituents and if they lose their support then consequently they are no longer entitled to be prime minister. In parliamentary systems, the role of the statesman who represents the country as a whole goes to the separate position of head of state, which is generally non-executive and non-partisan. Promising politicians in parliamentary systems likewise are normally preselected for safe seats - ones that are unlikely to be lost at the next election - which allows them to focus instead on their political career.

Countries with a parliamentary system of government:

Unicameral System

This table shows countries with parliament consisting of a single house.

Country                                                                           Parliament
African                                                            Union Pan African Parliament
Albania                                                            Kuvendi
Bangladesh                                                     Jatiyo Sangshad
Bulgaria                                                           National Assembly
Botswana                                                        Parliament
Burkina Faso                                                 National Assembly
Croatia                                                            Sabor
Denmark                                                        Folketing
Dominica                                                        House of Assembly
Estonia                                                           Riigikogu
Finland                                                           Eduskunta/Riksdag
Ghana                                                             Parliament
Greece                                                           Hellenic Parliament
Hungary                                                        National Assembly
Iceland                                                          Althing
Israel                                                              Knesset
Kuwait                                                          National Assembly of Kuwait
Latvia                                                           Saeima
Lebanon                                                      Assembly of Deputies
Lithuania                                                      Seimas
Luxembourg                                               Chamber of Deputies
Malta                                                         House of Representatives
Mauritius                                                      National Assembly
Moldova                                                          Parliament
Mongolia                                                            State Great Khural
Montenegro                                               Parliament
Nepal                                                           Legislature-Parliament
New Zealand                                          Parliament
Norway*                                                    Stortinget
Palestinian                                                     Authority Parliament
Papua New Guinea                                           National Parliament
Portugal                                                         Assembly of the Republic
Republic of Macedonia                                   Sobranie -Assembly
Saint Kitts and Nevis                                     National Assembly
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines                    House of Assembly
Samoa                                                               Fono
Serbia                                                           National Assembly
Singapore                                                Parliament
Slovakia                                                       National Council
Sri Lanka                                              Parliament
Sweden                                                    Riksdag
Turkey                                           Grand National Assembly
Ukraine                                             Verkhovna Rada
Vanuatu                                                           Parliament
Vietnam                                         National Assembly

The Norwegian Parliament is divided in the Lagting and Odelsting in legislative matters. This separation will be abolished with the next parliament in 2009 due to a constitutional amendment.

Bicameral system

This table shows organisations and countries with parliament consisting of two houses.Organisation or Country

Parliament                             Upper chamber                                 Lower chamber
Australia                            Commonwealth               Parliament Senate House of Representatives
Austria                               Parliament                                       Federal Council National Council
Antigua and Barbuda       Parliament                                       Senate House of Representatives
The Bahamas                        Parliament                                         Senate House of Assembly
Nigeria                             National Assembly                     Senate House of Representatives
Barbados                       House of Assembly                                 Senate House of Assembly
Belize                              National Assembly                           Senate House of Representatives
Belgium Federal                Parliament                                    Senate Chamber of Representatives
Bhutan                            Parliament                                      National Council National Assembly
Canada                                Parliament                                     Senate House of Commons
Czech Republic                  Parliament                                       Senate Chamber of Deputies
Ethiopia FederalParliamentaryAssembly House of Federation House of People's Representatives
European Union        Council of the European                          Union European Parliament
Germanym Federal Legislature/Bundesversammlung (Federal Assembly) Bundesrat (Federal Council) Bundestag (Federal Diet)
Grenada                            Parliament                                          Senate House of Representatives
India    Parliament (Sansad) Rajya Sabha (Council of States) Lok Sabha (House of People)
Ireland                                 Oireachtas                                      Seanad Éireann Dáil Éireann
Iraq                      National Assembly Council of Union                      Council of Representatives
Italy                                       Parliament                     Senate of the Republic Chamber of Deputies
Jamaica                                Parliament                                        Senate House of Representatives
Japan Diet                      House of Councillors                                  House of Representatives
Malaysia                Parliament Dewan Negara (Senate) Dewan Rakyat (House of Representatives)
Netherlands                            States-General Senate                           House of Representatives
Pakistan                               Parliament                                              Senate National Assembly
Poland                                  Parliament                                                         Senate Sejm
Saint Lucia                            Parliament                                            Senate House of Assembly
Slovenia                                   Parliament                                     National Council National Assembly
South Africa                          Parliament               National Council of Provinces National Assembly
Spain Cortes                        Generales Senate                                   Congress of Deputies
Switzerland                        Federal Assembly                         Council of States National Council
Thailand                                    National Assembly                    Senate House of Representatives
Trinidad and Tobago                Parliament                                       Senate House of Representatives
United Kingdom                            Parliament                            House of Lords House of Commons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia




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