General Assemblies of Lucrecia

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The General Assemblies of Lucrecia (Isurian: Asembleas Xerais de Lucrecia; Pelaxian: Comiciados Generales de Lucrecia) is the tricamerial parliament of Lucrecia. Its three legislative houses are, from lowest to highest, the Popular Assembly, the Centuriate Assembly, and the Senatorial House. The Popular Assembly is a federated legislative house that is split between the provincial Tributary Assembly, and the popular Common Assembly, the members of both chambers being chosen through direct election and serve for three years. The Centuriate Assembly, initially representative of the regions of the Emeritan and pre-1970 Lucrecian republics, represents the cantons and the linguistic groups of which they are elected by and serve for five years. The Senatorial House represents the aristocracy of the republic, and was once the most powerful legislative house until its powers and abilities reduced it to a 500-strong committee of legal experts as the aristocracy tended towards the law instead of the military as their mainstay; they are appointed for life by the Consuls.

General Assemblies of Lucrecia

Asembleas Xerais de Lucrecia
Comiciados Generales de Lucrecia
737th Session
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Tricameral
HousesSenatorial House
Centuriate Assembly
Popular Assembly
Leadership
Rosalía Rueda
Alfredo Posse
since 15 March 2035
Marco Bahamonde
since 25 March 1995
Juan Portillo
since 15 March 2033
Structure
Seats
Popular Assembly political groups
Government
  •   Courtiers' Caucus (82)
  •   Countrymen's Caucus (79)
  •   Workers' Caucus (42)
  •   JMM (10)
  •   DAL (2)
Opposition
Centuriate Assembly political groups
Government
  •   Courtiers (62)
    • Isurian (32)
    • Emeritan (30)
  •   Countrymen (58)
    • Isurian (24)
    • Emeritan (34)
  •   Workers (19)
    • Isurian (10)
    • Emeritan (9)
Opposition
Elections
Popular Assembly last election
18 March 2035
Centuriate Assembly last election
13 March 2032
Meeting place
National Assembly Building
Emérida d'il Mar, Lucrecia

The sitting for the two lower houses always begins in March, with the Centuriate election being held on 13 March and the legislative election being held on 18 March. Members of these houses have no set term limit, although it is customary for members to retire at the age of 80 to make way for younger aspiring politicians, often a protégé of the outgoing member. Presently, there are 1050 members of the General Assemblies, with each legislative house being given as follows: 500 senators, 150 centurions, 200 tributaries, and 200 popular representatives. This makes the General Assemblies not only one of the few legislatures in the world to have more upper house members than lower house members, but also one of the largest legislatures by total amount of members.

Because the General Assemblies is seen as the continuation of the Emeritan legislature and not a successor, the year of its establishment is said to be the year 178 BC, which was when the Emeritan Republic was formed. Initially a tetracameral legislature, the two lowest houses, that being the Tributary and Common Assemblies, were merged in the 1970s to form the Popular Assembly as Lucrecia moved towards decentralisation and linguistic segregation which necessitated a move away from the traditional Caphiric Republic-based form of government. It is also because of these changes that the party system presently consists of many small linguistically-segregated parties, which in turn practically requires that coalition governments must be negotiated and formed, although conventionally the two main parties of each ideology that is linguistically segregated often caucus with each other as it is constitutionally impossible for incompatible languages to run in an incompatible community (A Pelaxian-speaking candidate would not be able to run in the Isurian Generality, although an Isurian-speaking candidate would be able to run in the bilingual Emerida-Presidential Canton). Case in point, the current composition of the Popular Assembly has made it so that a grand coalition had to be arranged between the establishment parties so as to prevent the far-right PXI from taking control of the Curia.