A 'Member of Parliament', or 'MP', is a representative elected by the voters to a
parliament. In many countries the term applies specifically to members of the lower house, as upper houses often have a unique title, such as
senate, and thus also have unique titles for its members, such as "senators". Members of parliament tend to form
parliamentary parties with members of the same
political party.
Australia
In
Australia, the term ''Member of Parliament''means patrick thompson rocks wooohooooo refers to the
Australian House of Representatives, and in some jurisdictions it also refers to members of the
State Parliament.
★
Queensland Members of the Legislative Assembly, the
unicameral (single house)
Parliament of Queensland were known as ''
Members of the Legislative Assembly'' (MLAs) until 2001 and are now known as ''Members of Parliament'' (MPs).
[1]
Canada
In
Canada, the term ''Member of Parliament'' refers to both members of the
Canadian House of Commons and the
Senate of Canada. However, in common parlance, the term is often used in reference to members of the lower house; members in the Senate are referred to as "senators".
In
Ontario, the members of the provincial
legislature style themselves as "''
Members of the Provincial Parliament''" ("MPPs").
[2]
Czech Republic
In
Czech Republic Members of Parliament (Parlament in Czech) are called 'Poslanci' (singular Poslanec).
Denmark
In
Denmark, ''Members of Parliament'' refers to the elected members of the Danish Parliament, ''Folketinget.'' The style used is ''Medlem af
Folketinget'', abbreviated ''MF'', e.g. an MP would be styled as "Jens Jensen, MF" or "Jens Jensen, Medlem af Folketinget". Denmark had a bicameral parliament until 1953, and members of the two houses were referred to respectively as ''Medlem af Folketinget'', or ''MF'' vs. ''Medlem af Landstinget'', or ''ML''. Members were also referred to as respectively, ''Folketingsmand'' N.N., ''Landstingsmand N.N.'' or (collectively): ''
Rigsdagsmand N.N.'' In all cases, these titles were pluralized as ''-mænd'', e.g. ''Folketingsmænd''.
India
In
India, the term ''Member of Parliament'' refers to the
Sansad or the
Indian Parliament chambers of the
Lok Sabha or the
Rajya Sabha.
MPs to the
Lok Sabha are elected popularly by constituencies in the Indian states and union territories, while MPs to the
Rajya Sabha are elected by State legislatures. Central government is formed by the party having the most number of MPs in the
Lok Sabha. Each state is allocated a fixed number of elected MPs. The Indian state,
Uttar Pradesh, represents the maximum number of MPs in the
Lok Sabha.
Ireland
In
Ireland, the term ''Member of Parliament'' can refer to the members of the pre-1801
Irish House of Commons of the
Parliament of Ireland. It can also refer to Irish members elected to the
British House of Commons from 1801 to 1922. Members of the modern Irish lower house of parliament,
Dáil Éireann (or "the Dáil") are termed ''Teachtaí Dála'' (''
Teachta Dála'' singular) or TDs. The upper house is called the Seanaid (''shan-ad''). Its members are called Seanaideorai (''shan-ad-ore-ee'') or Senators.
Italy
In the Republican
Italian Parliament the current term is
''Deputato'' (that is ''deputy'' as appointed to act on people's behalf) and so the Lower House takes the name of
''Camera dei Deputati''. Similarly to other countries, the Higher House is called
''Senato'' and its members are the ''Senatori''.
Lebanon
The
Parliament of Lebanon is the Lebanese national legislature. It is elected to a four-year term by universal adult suffrage in multi-member constituencies, apportioned among Lebanon's diverse Christian and Muslim denominations. Its major functions are to elect the
President of the Republic, to approve the government (although appointed by the President, the Prime Minister, along with the Cabinet, must retain the confidence of a majority in the Parliament), and to approve laws and expenditure.
Malaysia
The
Malaysian Parliament is modeled after the
Parliament of the United Kingdom and consists of two houses, known as the ''
Dewan Rakyat'', which is the
House of Representatives, and ''
Dewan Negara'', the
Senate.
The members of the ''Dewan Rakyat'' are elected in
general elections or
by-elections, whereas the members of the ''Dewan Negara'' are either appointed by the
king, in recognition of outstanding service to their country or chosen by the states. Each state appoints a number of senators proportional to its size.
Currently, the ''Dewan Negara'' has 70 seats while the ''Dewan Rakyat'' has 219. Of the 219 seats in the ''Dewan Rakyat'', as of 2006, 199 are held by the ruling
Barisan Nasional and 20 by
opposition parties.
Members of Parliament are styled ''Yang Berhormat'' ("Honourable") with the initials ''Y.B.'' appended
prenominally. A
prince who is a Member of Parliament is styled ''Yang Berhormat Mulia''.
Netherlands
The parlement of the
Netherlands consist of two chambers; together they are know as parlement or "Staten-Generaal", literally Estates-General. The First Chamber is also know as the Senate and its members as "senatoren", senators. The Second Chamber, "Tweede Kamer", is the most important one. The important debates take place here. Also, the Second Chamber can edit proposed laws with
amendments and it can propose laws itself. The Senate doesn't have these possibilities. Its function is more a technical reviewing of laws. It can only pass a law or reject it. Both chambers are in
The Hague which is the seat of parlement but not the official capital of The Netherlands -that is
Amsterdam.
The 150 members of the Second Chamber are elected by
general elections every 4 years (unless the government falls). The 75 members of the Senate are elected indirectly. The members of the 12 provincial parlements elect the senators. The value of a vote of a member of a provincial parlement is relative to the population of the province. Provincial parlements are elected by general elections each 4 years.
See also (in dutch):
Staten-Generaal,
Eerste Kamer,
Tweede Kamer en
Provinciale Staten
New Zealand
New Zealand has a single-chambered (
unicameral) parliament. In New Zealand, ''Member of Parliament'' is the term for a member of the
New Zealand House of Representatives, although parliament technically consists of both the House and the
Queen. The New Zealand House of Representatives normally has 120 MPs, elected every three years. There are 69 electorate (constituency) MPs, 7 of whom are elected by
Māori who have chosen to vote in special
Māori seats. The remaining 51 MPs are elected from party lists. As of 2007, the speaker of the house is
Margaret Wilson.
Before 1951, New Zealand had a two-chambered (
bicameral) parliament, and there were two designations — MHR (Member of the House of Representatives, the body which survives today) and MLC (Member of the
Legislative Council).
Pakistan
In
Pakistan, ''Member of Parliament'' refers to a member of Parliament (
National Assembly of Pakistan, Qaumi Assembly). The National Assembly is based in
Islamabad.
Poland
Singapore
In
Singapore, ''Members of Parliament'' refers to elected members of the
Parliament of Singapore, the appointed
Non-Constituency Members of Parliament from the opposition, as well as the
Nominated Members of Parliament, who may be appointed from members of the public who have no connection to any political party in Singapore.
Sri Lanka
In
Sri Lanka, ''Members of Parliament'' refers to elected and nominated members of the
Parliament of Sri Lanka.
Sweden
In
Sweden, ''Members of Parliament'' refers to the elected
members of the Swedish
Riksdag.
Thailand
In the
Kingdom of Thailand, ''Members of Parliament'' refers to the elected
members of the
National Assembly of Thailand. Following the
military coup d'état on
September 19,
2006, all its 500 members are suspended from duty until the next election.
United Kingdom
The
United Kingdom has members of three different parliaments:
★ ''Members of Parliament'' (which refers to members of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom, abbreviated to ''MP''(''s'') but only in reference to members of the (lower)
House of Commons
★ ''
''Members of the European Parliament'' (''MEPs'')
★
''Members of the Scottish Parliament'' (''MSPs'') (
Elected members of the
pre-Union Parliament of Scotland were called ''Commissioners''.)
The
Welsh Assembly is not empowered to make primary legislation and forms the Welsh Assembly Government, which unusually combines legislative and executive functions. The National Assembly consists of 60 elected members; they use the
English title ''Assembly Member'' (''AM'') or the equivalent
Welsh ''Aelod y Cynulliad'' (''AC''), the latter being increasingly preferred.
The
Northern Ireland Assembly's 108 members are elected from 18 six-member constituencies on the basis of universal adult suffrage. The constituencies used are the same as those used for elections to the Westminster Parliament. Elected members are known as ''Members of the Legislative Assembly'' (''MLA''). The Assembly has authority to legislate in a field of competences known as "transferred matters". These matters are not enumerated in the Northern Ireland Act 1998. Rather, they include any competence not explicitly retained by the Parliament at Westminster. Uniquely, Assembly legislation is open to judicial review.
Between 1921 and 1973, Northern Ireland was governed by the
Parliament of Northern Ireland, a devolved assembly whose members were known as ''Members of Parliament''.
MPs in the
House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom are elected in
general elections and
by-elections to represent
constituencies by the
first-past-the-post system of election, and may remain MPs until Parliament is dissolved, which must occur within 5 years of the last General Election, as stated in the Parliament Act 1911.
Members of the
House of Lords are not MPs but ''Lords of Parliament'', and sit either for life in the case of the
Lords Temporal, or so long as they continue to occupy their ecclesiastical positions in the case of the
Lords Spiritual.
Hereditary Peers may no longer pass on their seat and those remaining have been elected by themselves, following the House of Lords Act 1999. Their numbers remain at 92 by top-up voting ("by-election") when a member dies, however Lord Avebury’s House of Lords (Amendment) Bill (HL Bill 51) paves the way for their gradual extinction and this may be enacted before grand constitutional reform occurs. Such major reform is likely to be somewhat prolonged based on the Lords' resistance to suggested proposals in February 2007.
[3]
There are several special members of Parliament, including the Prime Minister, other government ministers in the Commons, the
Chief Whip of each party,
Privy Counsellors, and the
Speaker of the House.
A candidate to become a Member of Parliament must be a British or Irish or Commonwealth citizen, must be over 18, and must not be a public official or officeholder, as set out in the schedule to the
Electoral Administration Act 2006[1] (this was a reduction in the lower age limit, as candidates needed to be 21 until the law came into effect in 2006).
Members of Parliament are technically forbidden to resign their seats (though they are not forbidden from refusing to seek re-election). In order to leave the house between elections, they must either die or take advantage of the rule that appointment to a "paid office under the Crown" disqualifies an MP from sitting in the Commons, and two nominally paid offices - the
Chiltern Hundreds and the
Manor of Northstead - exist to allow members to resign from the House. For more information, see the article
Resignation from the British House of Commons.
The basic salary of an MP in the House of Commons was increased to £60,277 on
1 November 2006. Many MPs (ministers, the Speaker, senior opposition leaders etc) receive a supplementary salary for their specific responsibilities. As of the
1 April 2006 increment these range from £25,255 for
junior whips to £126,085 for the
Prime Minister.
[2]
Other countries
MPs are also representatives in other parliamentary democracies that do not follow the Westminster system. Their functions are very much the same, yet the post is usually referred to in a different fashion such as ''Deputé'' in
France, ''Diputado'' in
Spain and many Latin American (
Hispanic) countries, ''Deputado'' in
Portugal and
Brazil, ''Deputato'' in
Italy or ''Mitglied des
Bundestages (MdB)'' in
Germany.
Notes
1. ''It was resolved at a meeting (19/10/2000) of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (Qld branch) that Members of the Legislative Assembly should be known as MP rather than MLA. ''
2. ''Journals of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario'', April 7, 1938. See also the ''Legislative Assembly Act'', R.S.O. 1990, which refers to "members of the Assembly".
3. http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/HLLReformChronology.pdf