Difference between revisions of "Senate of Sarenium"

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| last_election1    = August 1 2016; 60 Seats
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| next_election1    = On or before September 23rd 2019; 30 Seats
 
| redistricting    = SEC
 
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The '''Saren Senate''' is the [[upper house]] of the [[bicameral]] [[Parliament of Sarenium]], the [[lower house]] being the [[House of Commons of Sarenium|House of Commons]]. The composition and powers of the Senate are established in Chapter I, Part II of the [[Constitution of Sarenium|Saren Constitution]]. There are a total of 105 senators: 7 from each of the states. Three of those seven are appointed by the [[President of Sarenium|President]], on advice of the [[Prime Minister of Sarenium|Prime Minister]] and the remaining four are elected by their respective constituents. The elected Senators are elected every six years (with half of them being elected every three years) and the appointed Senators serve either a single-non-renewable eight-year term or resign at an earlier stage.
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The '''Saren Senate''' is the [[upper house]] of the [[bicameral]] [[Parliament of Sarenium]], the [[lower house]] being the [[House of Commons of Sarenium|House of Commons]]. The composition and powers of the Senate are established in Chapter I, Article II of the [[Constitution of Sarenium|Saren Constitution]]. There are a total of 105 senators: 7 from each of the states. Three of those seven are appointed by the [[President of Sarenium|President]], on advice of the [[Prime Minister of Sarenium|Prime Minister]] and the remaining four are elected by their respective constituents. The elected Senators are elected every six years (with half of them being elected every three years) and the appointed Senators serve either a single-non-renewable eight-year term or resign at an earlier stage.
  
 
The Senate is designed to be capable of blocking legislation from the House should it be needed, the Senate can only outright deny the legislation's passage should the house fail to pass a three-fifths majority. If the House does pass a 3/5 (378/630) majority, the Senate can only delay its passage for the next three terms of Parliament before which the President can grant the house the power to pass legislation without the Senate's authority. If the House acquires a 2/3 (420/630) majority, then the legislation can pass with just 1/3 of the Senate (35/105) in approval. A 'refusal to provide Presidential Assent' (on constitutional validity) will only be overrode with a 2/3s majority in the House and a 4/5th majority in the Senate.
 
The Senate is designed to be capable of blocking legislation from the House should it be needed, the Senate can only outright deny the legislation's passage should the house fail to pass a three-fifths majority. If the House does pass a 3/5 (378/630) majority, the Senate can only delay its passage for the next three terms of Parliament before which the President can grant the house the power to pass legislation without the Senate's authority. If the House acquires a 2/3 (420/630) majority, then the legislation can pass with just 1/3 of the Senate (35/105) in approval. A 'refusal to provide Presidential Assent' (on constitutional validity) will only be overrode with a 2/3s majority in the House and a 4/5th majority in the Senate.
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Any legislation to pass Parliament must initially be presented to the Senate in which legislation can be blocked only if it fails to garner 378 votes in the [[House of Commons of Sarenium|House]]. Should the Senate block legislation which failed to pass with 3/5s of the Houses votes (and only passed with 1/2), it is blocked and is thus held in deadlock. However, if the House does acquire over 378 votes, the Senate can only delay passage before which the President can allow its passage without Senatorial Consent. The President is however unbound from 'Constitutional Prerogative' and is thus permitted to formally refuse assent and thus fail the legislation on any other reasons. This power to refuse is only exercised in either a delayed legislation or in the event of the President's justification and belief of constitutional invalidity.  
 
Any legislation to pass Parliament must initially be presented to the Senate in which legislation can be blocked only if it fails to garner 378 votes in the [[House of Commons of Sarenium|House]]. Should the Senate block legislation which failed to pass with 3/5s of the Houses votes (and only passed with 1/2), it is blocked and is thus held in deadlock. However, if the House does acquire over 378 votes, the Senate can only delay passage before which the President can allow its passage without Senatorial Consent. The President is however unbound from 'Constitutional Prerogative' and is thus permitted to formally refuse assent and thus fail the legislation on any other reasons. This power to refuse is only exercised in either a delayed legislation or in the event of the President's justification and belief of constitutional invalidity.  
  
Should the House pass legislation with a strong 420 votes, only 35 of the Senators need to be in contention for the legislation to pass and any less will only delay the legislation.
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Should the House pass legislation with a strong 420 votes, only 35 of the Senators need to be in contention for the legislation to pass and any less will only delay the legislation by 3 terms (Parliamentary Calendar).
  
 
===Blocking Supply===
 
===Blocking Supply===
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*A second attempt has also failed to pass the legislation.
 
*A second attempt has also failed to pass the legislation.
  
After satisfaction, the Prime Minister must request that the President dismiss the entirety of Parliament, exempt appointed Senators unless the President chooses to individually withdraw any of the Senators[[Commission to the Senate|commission to the Senate]].
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After satisfaction, the Prime Minister must request that the President dismiss the entirety of Parliament, exempt appointed Senators unless the President chooses to individually withdraw any of the Senators [[Commission to the Senate|commission to the Senate]], with consent of the House.
  
==Elected Senators==
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==Membership==
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Under the provisions of Chapter 1 Article II of the Constitution, a Senator who is elected must;
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*Not possess allegiance to a foreign power.
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*Not hold assets out of Saren soil.
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*Not be seen as a breach of the [[Crimes Against the State Act of 1965]].
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*Not be held responsible for any acts set forth in the [[Parliamentary Maintenance Act of 1889]]
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Clause 2 of Article 2 of Chapter 1 applies that in addition to the same requirements applied to MPs, a Senator cannot have served in the [[House of Commons of Sarenium|House of Commons]] within the past Parliamentary session and the current.
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Appointed Senators are exempted from Clause 2 given that they have been nominated by the Prime Minister.
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===Elected Senators===
 
Currently, of the sixty elected Senators there are 26 [[Conservative Party of Sarenium|Conservative]] Senators and 20 [[Labor Party of Sarenium|Labor]] Senators. There are also 13 elected independents and 4 [[Sarenium United (Political Party)|United]] and 7 [[Greens Party of Sarenium|Greens]] Senators. The Senators are elected using a preferential quota system. In which, (in a regular election) the quota of first preferences required is 34% of the vote. In a double-dissolution election, that quota is halved to 17%.  
 
Currently, of the sixty elected Senators there are 26 [[Conservative Party of Sarenium|Conservative]] Senators and 20 [[Labor Party of Sarenium|Labor]] Senators. There are also 13 elected independents and 4 [[Sarenium United (Political Party)|United]] and 7 [[Greens Party of Sarenium|Greens]] Senators. The Senators are elected using a preferential quota system. In which, (in a regular election) the quota of first preferences required is 34% of the vote. In a double-dissolution election, that quota is halved to 17%.  
==Appointed Senators==
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===Appointed Senators===
 
A split appointed bench of 5 independents, 15 [[Conservative Party of Sarenium|Tory]] and 15 [[Labor Party of Sarenium|Labor]] Senators.
 
A split appointed bench of 5 independents, 15 [[Conservative Party of Sarenium|Tory]] and 15 [[Labor Party of Sarenium|Labor]] Senators.
  
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President [[Anthony Perales|Perales]] has announced his intention to reappoint Senators (should they be willing to depart) to further balance the Senate.
 
President [[Anthony Perales|Perales]] has announced his intention to reappoint Senators (should they be willing to depart) to further balance the Senate.
 
==Benefits and Salaries==
 
==Benefits and Salaries==
 
===Incumbent Numbers===
 

Revision as of 05:49, 3 November 2016

Senate of Sarenium
155th Parliament of Sarenium
Type
Type Upper house of the Parliament of Sarenium
Term limits 45 Appointed by President; 60 elected by constituents.
Leadership
Speaker of the Senate Tim Barlow, Conservatives
Since August 1st, 2016
Structure
Seats 105
SarenSenate.png
Political groups

Government

Opposition

Crossbench

  •      Greens
  •      Sarenium United
  •      Independents
Length of term7 Various
Elections
Voting system Preferential System
Last election August 1 2016; 60 Seats
Next election On or before September 23rd 2019; 30 Seats
Redistricting SEC


The Saren Senate is the upper house of the bicameral Parliament of Sarenium, the lower house being the House of Commons. The composition and powers of the Senate are established in Chapter I, Article II of the Saren Constitution. There are a total of 105 senators: 7 from each of the states. Three of those seven are appointed by the President, on advice of the Prime Minister and the remaining four are elected by their respective constituents. The elected Senators are elected every six years (with half of them being elected every three years) and the appointed Senators serve either a single-non-renewable eight-year term or resign at an earlier stage.

The Senate is designed to be capable of blocking legislation from the House should it be needed, the Senate can only outright deny the legislation's passage should the house fail to pass a three-fifths majority. If the House does pass a 3/5 (378/630) majority, the Senate can only delay its passage for the next three terms of Parliament before which the President can grant the house the power to pass legislation without the Senate's authority. If the House acquires a 2/3 (420/630) majority, then the legislation can pass with just 1/3 of the Senate (35/105) in approval. A 'refusal to provide Presidential Assent' (on constitutional validity) will only be overrode with a 2/3s majority in the House and a 4/5th majority in the Senate.

Powers

Any legislation to pass Parliament must initially be presented to the Senate in which legislation can be blocked only if it fails to garner 378 votes in the House. Should the Senate block legislation which failed to pass with 3/5s of the Houses votes (and only passed with 1/2), it is blocked and is thus held in deadlock. However, if the House does acquire over 378 votes, the Senate can only delay passage before which the President can allow its passage without Senatorial Consent. The President is however unbound from 'Constitutional Prerogative' and is thus permitted to formally refuse assent and thus fail the legislation on any other reasons. This power to refuse is only exercised in either a delayed legislation or in the event of the President's justification and belief of constitutional invalidity.

Should the House pass legislation with a strong 420 votes, only 35 of the Senators need to be in contention for the legislation to pass and any less will only delay the legislation by 3 terms (Parliamentary Calendar).

Blocking Supply

The Senate's application in the past for blocking supply was notable in the 1876 Constitutional Crisis where a 'money bill' was refused passage by the Senate and resulted in the eventual sacking of then Prime Minister Gough Reagan in favor of a double dissolution. Only supply bills can be used for triggering a double dissolution.

Limitations

With 45 seats of the Senate being appointees with little bedrock need for party affiliation, much debate occurs for the remaining eight needed votes which must come from the big parties assuming the appointed Senators are content. In most cases, the Senate does not block legislation or delay it, however, varying legislation has been forced through deadlock and has been used a trigger for a double dissolution election.

Double Dissolution

The dissolution of the Senate and House at once, such elections can only occur when the trigger is satisfied;

  • The legislation must have originated in the House.
  • The legislation must have been delayed by the Senate.
  • The legislation must be a supply bill 'money bill' (thus exempt from being used for a House-Only bill).
  • A second attempt has also failed to pass the legislation.

After satisfaction, the Prime Minister must request that the President dismiss the entirety of Parliament, exempt appointed Senators unless the President chooses to individually withdraw any of the Senators commission to the Senate, with consent of the House.

Membership

Under the provisions of Chapter 1 Article II of the Constitution, a Senator who is elected must;

Clause 2 of Article 2 of Chapter 1 applies that in addition to the same requirements applied to MPs, a Senator cannot have served in the House of Commons within the past Parliamentary session and the current. Appointed Senators are exempted from Clause 2 given that they have been nominated by the Prime Minister.

Elected Senators

Currently, of the sixty elected Senators there are 26 Conservative Senators and 20 Labor Senators. There are also 13 elected independents and 4 United and 7 Greens Senators. The Senators are elected using a preferential quota system. In which, (in a regular election) the quota of first preferences required is 34% of the vote. In a double-dissolution election, that quota is halved to 17%.

Appointed Senators

A split appointed bench of 5 independents, 15 Tory and 15 Labor Senators.

These appointed Senators have special requirements, unlike regular Senators, their seats can remain vacant but when appointed cannot be dismissed until the conclusion of the entire eight year term. Their commission to the Senate can be rescinded after six years of service without warning or at the request of the President and with the assent of the House of Commons, in such a case, the vacant seat must be filled within six months or by conclusion of the session of Parliament, whichever is first.

President Perales has announced his intention to reappoint Senators (should they be willing to depart) to further balance the Senate.

Benefits and Salaries