{{infobox legislature | background color | #8B0000 | text_color white | name Sejm of the Republic of Poland | native_name Sejm Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej | transcription_name | legislature | coa_pic Sejm logo.png | coa_res 80px | coa-pic | coa-res | house_type Lower house | body | houses | leader1_type Marshal of the Sejm | leader1 Grzegorz Schetyna | party1 PO | election1 | leader2_type Deputy Marshals of the Sejm | leader2 Ewa Kierzkowska, PSLMarek Kuchciński, PiSStefan Niesiołowski, POJerzy Wenderlich, SLD | party2 | election2 | leader3_type | leader3 | party3 | election4 | leader4_type | leader4 | party4 | election5 | leader5_type | leader5 | party5 | election6 | leader6_type | leader6 | party6 | election6 | members 460 | house1 | house2 | structure1 Sejm4.svg | structure1_res 240px | structure2 | structure2_res | political_groups1 Government (239) PO (208) PSL (31) Opposition Parties PiS (147) SLD (45) PJN (15) SDPL (3) Independents (11) | political_groups2 | committees1 | committees2 | joint_committees | voting_system1 | voting_system2 | last_election1 21 October 2007 | last_election2 | session_room PL Sejm hall.jpg | session_res 240px | meeting_place The Sejm Building Śródmieście, Warsaw | website http://www.sejm.gov.pl | footnotes }} |
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The Sejm is the lower house of the Polish parliament. The Sejm is made up of 460 deputies, or Poseł in Polish (literally 'Envoy'). It is elected by universal ballot and is presided over by a speaker called the Marshal of the Sejm (Marszałek Sejmu).
Before the 20th century, the term "Sejm" referred to the entire three-chamber Polish parliament, comprising the lower house (Chamber of Envoys; ), the upper house (Senate; Polish: Senat) and the King. It was commonly termed a three-estate parliament. Since the Second Polish Republic (1918–1939), the term "Sejm" has referred only to the lower house of the parliament; the upper house is called the "Senat".
"Sejm" stems from the Old Slavic word meaning "gathering". The power of early, various wiece ("councils") grew stronger during the time of Poland's fragmentation (1146–1295), but it was only in the late 15th century that the Sejm became established as a regularly convening body. From 1493 forward, the indirect elections were repeated every two years. With the development of the unique Polish "Golden Liberty" system, the Sejm's powers increased.
The first Sejm was composed of two chambers:
The number of envoys in the lower chamber grew in number — and power — as they pressured the king for more privileges. The spur toward action increased when landed nobility was drafted into military service. After 1569's Union of Lublin, the Kingdom of Poland was transformed into the federation of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the number of the Sejm's members was increased by including envoys from the Lithuanian nobility.
The Sejm severely limited the king's powers. Its chambers reserved the final decisions in legislation, taxation, budget, and treasury matters (including military funding), foreign affairs, and titles of nobility. In 1573, in the act of the Warsaw Confederation, the nobles of the Sejm officially sanctioned, and guaranteed to each other, religious tolerance in Commonwealth territory, ensuring an eastern-European refuge from the ongoing Reformation and Counter-Reformation wars.
Until the end of the 16th century, unanimity was not required, and the majority-voting process was the most commonly used electoral form. Later, with the rise of power held by Polish magnates, the unanimity principle was reinforced with the institution of the nobility's right of liberum veto (Latin for "I freely forbid"). If the envoys were unable to reach a unanimous decision within six weeks (the time limit of a single session), deliberations were declared null and void. From the mid-17th century onward, any objection to a Sejm resolution — by either an envoy or a senator — automatically caused the rejection of other, previously approved resolutions. This was because all resolutions passed by a given session of the Sejm formed a whole resolution, and, as such, was published as the annual constitution of the Sejm, e.g., Anno Domini 1667. In the 16th century, no single person or small group dared to hold up proceedings, but, from the second half of the 17th century, the liberum veto was used to virtually paralyze the Sejm, and brought the Commonwealth to the brink of collapse. The liberum veto was finally abolished by the May Constitution of Poland in 1791.
It is estimated that, between 1493 and 1793, sejms were held 240 times, with a debate-time sum of 44 years.
The Chamber of Envoys, despite its name, consisted not only of 77 envoys (sent by local assembly) from the hereditary nobility, but also of 51 deputies, elected by the non-noble population. A deputy's term of office was six years; half of the deputies were elected every two years, and all were covered by Parliamentary immunity. Candidates for deputy had to be able to read and write, and have a certain amount of wealth. The legal voting age was 21, but military personnel were not allowed to vote.
Parliamentiary sessions were initially convened every two years, and lasted for (at least) 30 days. However, after many clashes between liberal deputies and conservative government officials, sessions were later called only four times (1818, 1820, 1826, and 1830, with the last two sessions being secret).
The Sejm had the right to call for votes on civil and administrative legal issues. With permission from the king, it could also vote on matters related to the fiscal system and the military. It had the right to control government officials, and to file petitions.
The 64-member Senate was composed of voivodes and kasztelans (both types of provincial governors), Russian "princes of the blood," and nine bishops. It acted as the Parliament Court, had the right to control citizens' books, and had similar legislative rights as did the Chamber of Deputies.
Roza Pomerantz-Meltzer, member of a Zionist party, was the first woman elected to the Sejm, in 1919.
The Sejm voted on the budget as well as on the periodic "national plans" that were a fixture of communist economies. The Sejm deliberated in sessions that were ordered to convene by the State Council.
The Sejm also chose a Prezydium ("presiding body") from among its members; the marshall of which was always a member of the United People's Party. In its preliminary session, the Sejm also nominated the Prime Minister, the Council of Ministers of Poland, and members of the State Council. It also chose many other government officials, including the head of The Supreme Chamber of Control and members of the State Tribunal and the Constitutional Tribunal, as well as the Ombudsman (the last three bodies of which were created in the 1980s).
The Senate of Poland was abolished by the Polish people's referendum, in 1946, after which the Sejm became the sole legislative body in Poland.
Between 7 and 19 deputies are elected from each electorate using the d'Hondt method (with one exception, in 2001, when the Sainte-Laguë method was used) — their number being proportional to an electorate's population. Additionally, a threshold is used, so that candidates are chosen only from parties that gained at least 5% of the nationwide vote (candidates from ethnic-minority parties are exempt from this threshold).
Category:Legislative buildings in Europe Poland
ca:Sejm cs:Sejm da:Sejm de:Sejm es:Sejm eo:Sejmo (Pollando) eu:Sejm fr:Sejm gl:Sejm it:Sejm he:סיים ka:პოლონეთის რესპუბლიკის სეიმი lt:Abiejų Tautų Respublikos Seimas hu:Szejm (lengyel) nl:Sejm ja:ポーランド共和国下院 no:Sejm nn:Sejmen pl:Sejm Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej pt:Sejm ro:Seimul Poloniei ru:Сейм Республики Польша sk:Sejm fi:Sejm sv:Sejm uk:Сейм Республіки Польща zh:波兰共和国下议院This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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