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Legislative Assembly of Rio Grande do Sul

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Legislative Assembly of Rio Grande do Sul

Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul
56th Legislature
Type
Type
History
Founded1828
Leadership
President
Vilmar Zanchin, MDB
1st Vice President
Nadine Anflor, PSDB
2nd Vice President
Valdeci Oliveira, PT
1st Secretary
Adolfo Brito, PP
2nd Secretary
Eliana Bayer, Republicanos
3rd Secretary
Paparico Bacchi, PL
4th Secretary
Structure
Seats55
Political groups
Government (28)[1]
  PP (7)
  MDB (6)
  PSDB (5)
  PDT (4)
  UNIÃO (3)
  PODE (2)
  PSD (1)

Opposition (14)

  PT (11)
  PSOL (2)
  PCdoB (1)

Independent (13)

  PL (5)
  Republicanos (5)
  NOVO (1)
  PSB (1)
  PRD (1)
Length of term
4 years
SalaryR$ 31,238.19 monthly[2]
Elections
Open list proportional representation
Last election
2 October 2022
Next election
4 October 2026
Meeting place
Farroupilha Palace, Porto Alegre
Website
ww4.al.rs.gov.br
Constitution
Constitution of the State of Rio Grande do Sul[3][4]

The Legislative Assembly of Rio Grande do Sul (Portuguese: Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul) is the regional parliament of Rio Grande do Sul, a federative unit in Brazil. It has 55 state deputies elected every 4 years.

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Transcription

History

Imperial Brazil

The Assembly originated in 1828 as the General Council of the Province in the Casa da Junta, which had limited legislative power. After the creation of the Provincial Legislative Assemblies by Law No. 16 of 12 August 1834, the Legislative Assembly of São Pedro do Rio Grande do Sul began to operate on 20 April 1835. However, the Ragamuffin War, which initiated in September of the same year, prompted the Assembly to go into recess until 1 March 1845, briefly reactivating between October and November 1837. It was closed again from 1865 to 1871, during the Paraguayan War, when the imperial government suspended constitutional guarantees.[5][6]

Republican Brazil

The Assembly was deactivated with the Proclamation of the Republic in 1889 until 25 June 1891. With the 1935 State Constitution, it was reduced to a Permanent Commission of 7 members, and on 10 November 1937, Getúlio Vargas decreed the Estado Novo and closed all the legislative houses. It remained in this condition until 1947, when the new deputies met for the third State Constituent Assembly.[5][6]

On 20 September 1967, the legislature's new building, the Farroupilha Palace, was inaugurated.[6][7]

Present composition

Parties in the 56th Legislature
Party Floor leader Seats
Workers' Party Luiz Fernando Mainardi 11
Progressives Guilherme Pasin 7
Brazilian Democratic Movement Edivilson Brum 6
Brazilian Social Democracy Party Valdir Bonatto 5
Liberal Party Rodrigo Lorenzoni 5
Republicans Rodrigo Zucco 5
Democratic Labour Party Eduardo Loureiro 4
Brazil Union Aloísio Classmann 3
Socialism and Liberty Party Luciana Genro 2
We Can Airton Lima 2
Communist Party of Brazil Bruna Rodrigues 1
New Party Felipe Camozzato 1
Social Democratic Party Juliano Franczak 1
Brazilian Socialist Party Elton Weber 1
Brazilian Labour Party Elizandro Sabino 1

Committees

The Legislative Assembly has Standing and Temporary Committees, technical bodies destined to conduct studies and provide specialised reports. Below is the list of Standing Committees:[8]

Committee President
Committee on Agriculture, Animal Husbandry, Fishing and Cooperativism Luciano Silveira (MDB)
Committee on Municipal Affairs Joel Wilhelm (PP)
Committee on Citizenship and Human Rights Laura Sito (PT)
Committee on Constitution and Justice Frederico Antunes (PP)
Committee on Economy, Sustainable Development and Tourism Gustavo Victorino (Republicanos)
Committee on Education, Culture, Sport, Science and Technology Sofia Cavedon (PT)
Committee on Finance, Planning, Inspection and Control Patrícia Alba (MDB)
Committee on Health and the Environment Neri Júnior (PSDB)
Committee on Security, Public Services and State Modernization Stela Farias (PT)
Joint Standing Committee on Consumer and Taxpayer Protection and Popular Legislative Participation Thiago Duarte (UNIÃO)
Joint Standing Committee on Mercosur and International Affairs Adriana Lara (PL)

Historical composition

Legislature
(election)
Parliamentary groups
Government Non-aligned Opposition
Vargas Era
XXXVI (1935)
  •   PRL (21)
  •   Class representatives (7)
Fourth Republic
XXXVII (1947)
XXXVIII (1950)
  •   PSP (2)
  •   PSB (1)
XXXIX (1954)
  •   PRP (4)
  •   PSP (2)
  •   PSB (1)
XL (1958)
XLI (1962)
  •   PSB (1)
  •   PTB (23)
  •   MTR (4)
Military dictatorship
XLII (1966)
XLIII (1970)
XLIV (1974)
XLV (1978)
XLVI (1982)
Sixth Republic
XLVII (1986)
XLVIII (1990)
XLIX (1994)
L (1998)
LI (2002)
LII (2006)
LIII (2010)
LIV (2014)
LV (2018)
References: [9][10][11][12]

References

  1. ^ Schaffner, Fábio (2 January 2023). "No segundo mandato, Leite terá base menor na Assembleia Legislativa". GZH (in Portuguese). Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Remuneração dos Deputados". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Legislação Estadual". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  4. ^ Soares, Débora Dornsbach; Erpen, Juliana (2013). O Parlamento Gaúcho: da Província de São Pedro ao Século XXI (in Portuguese). Porto Alegre: Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Presidentes do Parlamento (em ordem cronológica)". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  6. ^ a b c "Antiga Provedoria da Real Fazenda". Instituto do Patrimônio Histórico e Artístico do Estado (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Plenário 20 de Setembro". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  8. ^ "Comissões Parlamentares". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  9. ^ "Quadro de Legislaturas". Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  10. ^ Heinz, Flávio M.; Vargas, Jonas Moreira; Flach, Angela; Milke, Daniel Roberto (2005). Campagna, Juçara (ed.). O Parlamento em Tempos Interessantes: breve perfil da Assembléia Legislativa e de seus deputados – 1947-1982 (in Portuguese) (III ed.). Porto Alegre: Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  11. ^ Aita, Carmen; Axt, Gunter; Araújo, Vladimir (1996). Parlamentares Gaúchos das Cortes de Lisboa aos nossos Dias: 1821-1996 (in Portuguese). Porto Alegre: Assembleia Legislativa do Rio Grande do Sul.
  12. ^ "Resultados das eleições". Tribunal Regional Eleitoral do Rio Grande do Sul (in Portuguese). Retrieved 3 September 2023.

30°01′58″S 51°13′52″W / 30.0328°S 51.2311°W / -30.0328; -51.2311

This page was last edited on 10 March 2024, at 14:36
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