National Assembly

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National Assembly

The National Assembly is the unicameral legislature of Serbia. The assembly is composed of 250
proportionally elected deputies by secret ballot, on 4 years term. The assembly elects a president
(speaker) who presides over the sessions. The current president of the national assembly is Maja Gojkovi
since 23 April 2014.
The National Assembly exercise supreme legislative power. It adopts and amends the Constitution, elects
Government, appoints and dismisses Constitutional Court judges, president of the Supreme Court of
Cassation, Governor of the National Bank of Serbia and other state officials. All decisions are made by
majority vote of deputies at the session at which majority of deputies are present, except for amending the
Constitution, when two thirds majority is needed.
The assembly convenes in the House of the National Assembly in Belgrade.

Competencies
The competencies the National Assembly are defined by the Constitution of Serbia, articles 98-110:
adopts and amends the Constitution;
decides on changes concerning the borders of Serbia;
calls for the national referendum;
ratifies international contracts when the obligation of their ratification is stipulated by the Law;
decides on war and peace and declares state of war or emergency;
supervises the work of security services;
enacts laws and other general acts;
gives prior consent to the Statute of the autonomous province;
adopts defence strategy;
adopts development plan and spatial plan;
adopts the budget and end-of-year balance, at the governments proposal;
grants amnesty for criminal offences.
elects the Government, supervises its work and decides on expiry of term of office of the
government and ministers;
appoints and dismisses Constitutional Court judges;
appoints the president of the Supreme Court of Cassation, court presidents, public prosecutors
and judges;
appoints and dismisses the Governor of the National Bank of Serbia and supervises his/her work;
appoints and dismisses other officials stipulated by the Law.
Performs other functions stipulated by the Constitution and Law.

Elections
Parliamentary elections are regulated by the Constitution. The elections are held after the four-year term
of the previous assembly has expired, but can also be held before that if the Assembly dismisses the
Government or the Government resigns and no majority can be reached to elect new Government.
Elections are called by the President of Serbia 90 days before the end of the term of office of the National
Assembly, so that elections are finished within the following 60 days. Elections are closed party-list
proportional. The whole country is one electoral district. 250 seats are than distributed between the lists
using d'Hondt method. There is a minimum voting threshold of 5%, so that only the party lists which get
more than 5% of the votes are awarded the seats. There is no threshold for the ethnic minority lists.

After the elections, the first session of the new Assembly is convened by the Speaker from the previous
convocation, so that the session is held not later than 30 days from the day of declaring the final election
results.

Deputies
he assembly is composed of 250 deputies. At least 30% of the deputies are women. Deputies may not
hold dual functions which represent a conflict of interest. Deputies enjoy parliamentary immunity.

President and vice-presidents


By means of majority votes of all deputies, the National Assembly elects the President of the Assembly
(speaker) and one or more Vice-Presidents (deputy speakers), usually one vice-president from each
parliamentary group. The President of the National Assembly represents the National Assembly, convokes
its sessions, presides over them and performs other official activities. The vice-presidents assist the
President in performing the duties within his/her purview.
In case the President is temporarily absent, one of the Vice-Presidents designated by him/her stands in for
him/her. If the President does not designate any of the Vice-Presidents to stand in for him/her, the oldest
Vice-President shall stand in for him/her.
The Secretary of the National Assembly is appointed by the National Assembly. Secretary of the National
Assembly assists the President and Vice-Presidents in preparing and chairing sittings. His/her term of
office is terminated upon the constitution of a newly elected National Assembly, while he/she shall
continue discharging his/her duties until the appointment of a new Secretary. Secretary is not elected from
the deputies, and is not member of the Assembly.

Parliamentary groups
Parliamentary groups in the National Assembly are formed not later than seven days after the date of the
election of the National Assembly President. A parliamentary group comprises the deputies of one
political party or organisation, that has at least five deputies. A parliamentary group of at least five
members may also be established by the association of deputies belonging to several political parties ore
other political organisations that have less than five deputies each. A Parliamentary group is represented
by the Group Head. A Group has its Deputy Head, who stands in for the head in case of his/her absence.
During a National Assembly sitting, a Parliamentary group may authorise one of its members to represent
the Group in relation with a particular item from the agenda. When new members join a parliamentary
group, the group Head shall communicate to the National Assembly Speaker their signed statements of
accession.
The Parliamentary groups usually, but not necessary, correspond to the electoral party lists. Sometimes
deputies from two or more lists join to form one group, but more usually members of one list, who joined
together before the elections just to pass the threshold, split into two or more Parliamentary groups.

Vacancies and replacements


Serbia's Law on the Election of Representatives (2000) initially indicated that, if an elected
representative's mandate ended before the dissolution of the assembly, the right to fill the vacant position
would "belong to the political party on whose electoral list the representative whose mandate [had] ceased
was elected," and a new parliamentary mandate would be awarded to a candidate from the relevant party's
electoral list who did not win a mandate in the general election. The law did not specify that the mandate
would fall sequentially to the next candidate on the list who did not win a mandate. In addition, elected
representatives whose party memberships were terminated or whose names were struck from the register
of their party (or the political organization on whose list they were elected) were automatically deemed to
have their assembly mandates terminated; these latter provisions were rescinded by a constitutional court
decision in 2003.
This system was sometimes criticized. Vesna Pei, for many years a prominent opposition figure in
Serbia, argued in 2007 that it permitted party leaders to determine which candidates would enter
parliament following the elections, irrespective of their placement on the lists. Pei also stated that, after
the 2003 constitutional court decision, members who entered the assembly were often required by their
parties to sign blank resignation letters, by which they could be expelled from parliament if they dissented
from a party position. She argued that this led to corrupt practices, sometimes involving misuse of
assembly mandates to either keep governments in office or seek their overthrow. Daniel Bochsler, in a
2010 essay on Serbia's political system, also noted that the system gave significant power over individual
mandates to party leaders, although he added that the system of requiring blank resignation letters was
"more understandable if we take into account that party switches are very common in post-communist
legislatures, and not only in Serbia."
The law was reformed in 2011, to clarify that vacant mandates would be "awarded to the first candidate
from the same electoral list who was not awarded a mandate" and that, in the event of a resignation of a
member elected on a coalition list, the vacant mandate would fall to the first candidate on the list from the
same party who was not awarded a mandate. It also established a provision for the return to parliament of
members who resigned during the same convocation of the assembly to take a position in government,
and it stipulated that members would be required to submit resignation letters in person.

Sessions
The first session of the new Assembly is convened by the Assembly Speaker from the previous
convocation. The first sitting of the National Assembly is chaired by the oldest deputy. He/she is assisted
in his/her work by the youngest deputy from each of the four party lists that polled the largest number of
seats, and by the Secretary of the Assembly from the previous convocation. At the first sitting of the
National Assembly the President of the Assembly, Vice-Presidents and the members of the working
bodies of the National Assembly are elected and the Secretary of the National Assembly is appointed.
The National Assembly is convoked for two regular sessions per year, starting on the first workdays of
March and October. The Assembly is convoked for extraordinary session at the request of at least one-
third of the deputies or the request of the Government, with previously determined agenda. The National
Assembly can be convoked without announcement upon the declaration of the state of war or emergency.
The proposed agenda for a National Assembly sitting is prepared by the president. A quorum for the work
of the National Assembly exists if a minimum of one-third of deputies are present at the National
Assembly sitting. The quorum for the work of the National Assembly on Voting Days exists if at least 126
deputies are present at the sitting.
The right to propose laws, other regulations and general acts belongs to every deputy, the government,
assemblies of autonomous provinces or at least 30,000 voters. The Ombudsman and National Bank of
Serbia also have the right to propose laws falling within their competence. Upon the request of the
majority of all deputies or at least 100,000 voters, the National Assembly may call a referendum on issues
falling within its competence.
The National Assembly adopts decisions by majority vote of deputies at the session at which majority of
deputies are present. The deputies vote For a motion, Against a motion, or abstain from voting.
If the Assembly is in crisis, The President of the Republic may dissolve the National Assembly, upon an
elaborated proposal of the government. The government may not propose dissolution of the Assembly, if
a proposal has been submitted to dismiss the Government. The National Assembly is also dissolved if it
fails to elect the Government within 90 days from the day of its constitution. The National Assembly may
not be dissolved during the state of war and emergency. The National Assembly, which has been
dissolved, only performs current or urgent tasks. In case of declaration of the state of war or emergency,
its full competence is re-established and lasts until the end of the state of war, that is, emergency.

Acts
Acts passed by the National Assembly are:

laws;
budget;
development plan;
spatial plan;
financial statement;
Rules of procedure;
declarations;
resolutions;
recommendations;
decisions;
conclusions; and
authentic interpretations of the acts it passes.

The Rules of Procedure of the National Assembly of Serbia regulate the organisation and work of the
National Assembly and the manner in which the deputies rights and duties are exercised.

Committess
Committees are standing working bodies of the National Assembly established to consider and review
issues falling within the purview of the National Assembly, to propose official documents, as well as to
carry out reviews of policies pursued, and laws, by-laws and other regulations implemented by the
Government, to be done by each Committee for the field that falls within its purview; and also to perform
other duties foreseen by the Rules of Procedure. There are 30 standing Committees, and each Committee
may, from its midst, appoint one or more sub-committees to consider certain issues from its purview.
Before being considered by the National Assembly, a bill is considered by competent Committees and the
Government, if it is not the submitter of the bill. In their opinion, the Committees and the Government
may propose that the National Assembly accept or reject the bill.
Parliamentary Groups nominate members for each Committee proportionally to the number of deputies
they have at the National Assembly. The proposed candidate list for Committee members is voted on as a
unit, by open voting.

Building
The national assembly convenes in the House of the National Assembly building, located on Nikola Pai
Square in downtown Belgrade.

Source: wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Assembly_(Serbia)

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