Cannabis Indica

Parliament Act (ParlA)
Federal Assembly of Switzerland
  • Federal Act on the Federal Assembly (SR 171.10)
Territorial extentSwitzerland
Enacted byFederal Assembly of Switzerland
Enacted13 December 2002
Commenced1 December 2003
Repeals
Parliamentary Procedures Act (1962)
Status: Current legislation

The Parliament Act (ParlA) (German: Parlamentsgesetz, ParlG, French: Loi sur le Parlement, LParl, Italian: Legge sul Parlamento, LParl), is a Swiss federal law that clarifies the provisions of the Swiss constitution (Title 5, Chapter 2)[1] on the rights, duties, tasks, organization and procedure of the Federal Assembly, as well as the division of power between the Federal Assembly, the Federal Council, and the Federal courts.[2] It was adopted on 13 December 2002 by the Federal Assembly and came into force on 1 December 2003. It replaces the Parliamentary Procedures Act from 1962.

History[edit]

  • 1849: the first federal law governing the procedural relations between the two chambers of the Federal assembly (National Council and the Council of States).[3][4]
  • 1902: a total revision of the Act was passed. It introduced, among other things, the Finance Delegation.[5]
  • 1962: the Parliamentary Procedures Act (German: Geschäftsverkehrsgesetz, GVG, French: loi sur les rapports entre les conseils, LREC, Italian: legge sui rapporti fra i Consigli, LRC) is introduced, another total revision of the law.[6]
  • 2002: a third total revision of the law is introduced with the Parliament Act (ParlA), which comes into force on 1 December 2003.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

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