National Assembly (Kuwait)

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National Assembly of Kuwait

مجلس الأمة الكويتي

Majlis al-ʾUmma al-Kuwaytiyy
18th Legislative Session
Coat of arms or logo
Logo or emblem of the National Assembly
Type
Type
Term limits
None
Structure
Seats50 elected members
Up to 16 appointed members
Political groups
Government
  •   Independent (16)

Elected members

Length of term
Four years
Elections
Single non-transferable vote
Last election
April 4, 2024
Meeting place
Building of the National Assembly of Kuwait
Kuwait City, Kuwait
Website
kna.kw

The National Assembly (Arabic: مجلس الأمة) was the unicameral legislature of Kuwait. The National Assembly met in Kuwait City. Because political parties are illegal in Kuwait,[1] candidates ran as independents.[1] The National Assembly was made up of 50 elected members and 16 directly appointed government ministers (ex officio members).[1]

The National Assembly was nominally elected because it operated in an authoritarian context where the Emir of Kuwait dominates politics with the ability to dissolve the assembly.[2] However, in contrast to parliaments in other Gulf kingdoms, the Kuwaiti assembly had considerably more formal and informal power than elsewhere in the region.[3]

The assembly has frequently been dissolved and suspended by the Emir of Kuwait. The assembly was suspended from 1976-1981, 1986-1991, and since 10 May 2024.[3] From 2006 to March 2024, the assembly was dissolved 12 times.[3] The assembly was dissolved again in May 2024.

Overview[edit]

The National Assembly was the legislature in Kuwait, established in 1963.[4] Its predecessor, the 1938 National Assembly, was formally dissolved in 1939 after "one member, Sulaiman al-Adasani, in possession of a letter, signed by other Assembly members, addressed to Iraq's King Ghazi, requesting Kuwait's immediate incorporation into Iraq." This demand came after the merchant members of the Assembly attempted to extract oil money from Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, a suggestion refused by him and upon which he instigated a crackdown which arrested the Assembly members in 1939.[5]

The National Assembly had up to 50 MPs. Fifty deputies were elected by one non-transferable vote to serve four-year terms. Members of the cabinet also sat in the parliament as deputies. The constitution limited the size of the cabinet to 16. The cabinet ministers had the same rights as the elected MPs, with the following two exceptions: they did not participate in the work of committees, and they cannot vote when an interpolation leads to a no-confidence vote against one of the cabinet members. As per Article 107 of the Kuwait constitution, the National Assembly could be dissolved by the Emir by decree, giving the reasons for the dissolution. However, the National Assembly shall not be dissolved again on the same grounds, and elections for the new Assembly must be held within a period not exceeding two months from the date of the dissolution.[6]

Gender balance[edit]

Kuwaiti women gained the right to vote in 2005. Women first won seats in the National Assembly in the 2009 election, in which four women, Aseel al-Awadhi, Rola Dashti, Massouma al-Mubarak and Salwa al-Jassar, were elected.

Building[edit]

The parliament building was designed by Danish architect Jørn Utzon, who also designed the Sydney Opera House.

Political factions[edit]

While political parties were not legal in Kuwait, a number of political factions existed. The house was composed of different political factions:

  • The liberal bloc.
  • The Shaabi (populist) bloc: A coalition of populists (Sunni and Shia), liberals and nationalist political organizations with a focus on middle-class issues. The Popular Action Bloc is their main political organization.
  • The Islamist bloc: Consisting of Sunni Islamist members.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Gandhi, Jennifer (26 July 2010), "Institutions and Policies under Dictatorship", Political Institutions under Dictatorship, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 10–240, ISBN 978-0-511-51009-0, retrieved 2020-11-16
  2. ^ Gandhi, Jennifer (2008), "Institutions and Policies under Dictatorship", Political Institutions under Dictatorship, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 44–52, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511510090.005, ISBN 978-0-511-51009-0, retrieved 2020-11-16
  3. ^ a b c Yom, Sean (2024). "Will Kuwait's Next Parliament Be Its Last?". Journal of Democracy.
  4. ^ Herb, Michael (2014). The wages of oil : Parliaments and economic development in Kuwait and the UAE. Ithaca. ISBN 978-0-8014-5469-1. OCLC 897815115.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Crystal, Jill (27 January 1995). "3. Kuwait on the eve of oil" (Paperback). Oil and Politics in the Gulf: Rulers and Merchants in Kuwait and Qatar (Updated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780521466356. Retrieved 14 April 2023.
  6. ^ "Constitution of the State of Kuwait 1962, as amended to 2012". constitutions.unwomen.org. Retrieved 2021-09-02.

External links[edit]