ASSESSMENT OF PARLIAMENTARY CAPACITY
Submitted by christian on Fri, 05/20/2016 - 16:53
Please rate the following questions on a scale of 1-5 : (1) poor, (2) fair, (3) good, (4) very good and (5) excellent
1. The representativeness of the Parliament
- The composition of Parliament is representative of minority groups and regions (in terms of political opinons, geography, ethnicity, religion, education, etc.)
- Women are fairly represented in the Parliament
- Parliamentary procedures allow and encourage opposition and minority parties contribute to the work of the Parliament
- MPs have a full right to express their opinion freely, being protected from executive or legal interference
- Party discipline is not strictly enforced, MPs being usually allowed to vote against their party.
- The control of funding of political parties and electoral campaigns guarantees the independence of elected MPs in the exercise of their function.
- Parliament participates in the mechanisms of reconciliation and peace consolidation.
- Parliament effectively deals with citizens petitions and complains through a specialized committee for this matter.
- Members of Parliament have a strong organized constituency base, composing of offices, staff, and time scheduled to go in the constituency and meet people.
- Parliament is effective as a forum for debate on questions of public concern.
2. Parliament’s Administrative Capacity and Institutionalisation
- Rules of Procedure are clear, known and respected.
- Parliament is independent from the executive in deciding its own budget.
- Parliament is independent from the executive in deciding on its agenda and programmes.
- Parliament is independent from the executive on deciding on its committee structure and membership.
- Committee membership is stable during a parliamentary mandate.
- Committee resources are adequate to the need of parliamentary work in terms of meeting rooms, offices and facilities
- The number and the professional qualifications of parliamentary staff are adequate to the need of parliamentary work
- Parliament has sufficient information resources (library, research department, intranet system), to support the activity of members, factions and committees.
- All parliamentary decisions and legislative projects are debated in the competent committee before being submitted to debate and approval in the plenary.
- A Code of Official Conduct/Ethics for parliamentarians is implemented and overviewed by an Ethics Commissioner or by an Ethics Committee.
3. Parliament’s Legislative Capacity
- The laws issued by Parliament prevail in number the ordinances and the decrees issued by government.
- Parliament has the right to endorse, amend, or reject government’s ordinances and decrees.
- MPs have the right to initiate legislation and parliamentary procedures allow them to make use of this right fully.
- MPs have the right to amend legislative proposals and parliamentary procedures allow them to make use of this right fully.
- Parliamentary procedures provide MPs and committees with sufficient time to analyze and debate legislative proposals.
- Procedures for consultation with relevant groups of interests and NGOs in the course of legislation are systematic and transparent.
- The plenary usually follows committee recommendations and amendments on legislative proposals.
- There is an effective and easy system to track legislation and its status, inside the parliamentary administration.
- Parliament ensures that the enacted legislation is clear, concise, and intelligible.
- Parliament ensures that the enacted legislation is consistent with the constitution and the human rights of the population.
4. Parliament’s General Overall Capacity
- Parliament has constitutional and legal powers for an effective oversight of government activity.
- Parliament is effectively making use of its constitutional and legal powers to hold the government accountable.
- Parliament monitors the impact of laws once they are enacted, and evaluates the problems associated with the implementation of laws.
- The Parliament has the authority to appoint or confirm Ministers.
- Parliament is making use of a special weekly session for Questions an Interpellations.
- Ministers and other executive officials attend promptly the plenary sessions or committee meetings when their presence is requested, providing the Parliament with the information requested.
- Permanent committees have the power to oversee the activity of ministries and other executive agencies in their area of competence.
- Parliament has the authority to investigate activities of the executive and to settle inquiry committees.
- Parliament has the power to force the executive to resign, by voting a Motion of Censure or by a No Confidence Vote.
- Parliament is able to influence and scrutinize the national budget, through all stages (formulation, approval, execution, evaluation).
5. Parliament’s Security Oversight Capacity
- Parliament is consulted in defence and security issues systematically and consistently.
- The activity of every security agency is regulated by legislation debated and enacted by the Parliament.
- The activity of every security agency is overseen by a parliamentary committee, no agency being exonerated from parliamentary oversight.
- The committee responsible for defence and security issues disposes of adequate research, information, staff and other facilities to support for effective performance.
- The competent parliamentary committees organize frequently hearings on security matters.
- The competent parliamentary committes approve the budget for each security agency and monitor the execution of the budget by the respective agency.
- Parliament has the right to request the Supreme Audit institution to start and audit or an investigation on security budget execution.
- Parliament may ask information, investigate and eventually have a say on important defence procurement contracts.
- Competent parliamentary committees have the right to visit troops, military premises, and security sector agencies offices.
- MPs have legal access to secret information necessary to perform their oversight function, and the government is providing them with secret information.
6. Parliament’s Accountability and Visibility
- Parliamentary procedures allow for plenary and committee meetings which are open to media and the public.
- Journalists are free from restrictions on reporting on parliament and the activities of its members.
- Plenary and committee minutes are published in a timely manner.
- Records of voting on important parliamentary decisions or legislation are published in a timely manner.
- Parliamentary committees often hold public hearings of Ministers and other executive officials.
- Parliamentary debates are frequently broadcast live on television or radio.
- The electoral system effectively ensures the accountability of Parliament, individually and collectively, to the electorate.
- Citizens have immediate access to enforced legislation, through a variety of channels (internet, official journal, mass media, MPs circumsription offices, public libraries).
- Citizens have adequate opportunities to express their views and concerns directly to their representatives, regardless of party affiliation.
- Public expectations about the role to be played by Parliament are fulfilled.
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