The People’s Council
The Republic of Latvia was proclaimed
on November 18, 1918. It's first legislative institution
— the People’s Council — was established as a body
of 40 members on November 17, 1918, as a result of an
agreement among eight of Latvia’s democratic political
parties and in co-operation with a representative of the
Latgale Land Council. The political situation was such
that elections could not be held at that time.
Mandates in the Council were not
granted to individual persons. Each party had a certain
number of seats in the Council, and these were filled by
members authorized by the party. The members were often
replaced. There were 183 seats in the Council, although
the exact number of members is not known; historians
cite two figures – 245 and 297.
The People’s Council held 57
general meetings. It had 22 standing committees. The
Council elaborated a political platform which can be
regarded as the first provisional Constitution
(Satversme) of the Republic of Latvia, and it adopted
several important laws on rural local governments and
their election, on the Latvian monetary system, on
educational institutions, on citizenship, and on the
election of the Constitutional Assembly.
The People’s Council functioned
until April 30, 1920. Its President was Janis Cakste,
though he began chairing Council meetings only as of
July 13, 1919.
The Constitutional Assembly
The Constitutional Assembly was
Latvia’s first elected legislative body. Elections
were held on April 17 and 18, 1920, and 84.9 % of those
who had suffrage (677, 084 people) voted. There were 57
candidate lists covering 5 constituencies, and 16 of the
lists won seats in the Assembly. One hundred fifty
members, including 5 women, were elected altogether.
The Constitutional Assembly drafted
the basic law of the state — the Satversme — as well
as other laws. It adopted a law on agrarian reform, a
law on the election of the Saeima (Parliament), and
other laws. The Constitutional Assembly had 21 standing
committees. It held 213 plenary sessions and adopted 205
laws and 291 regulations having the force of law. The
President of the Constitutional Assembly was Janis Cakste.
The Assembly functioned until November 7, 1922.
The First Saeima
The legislative work that was begun by the
Constitutional Assembly was continued by the Saeima.
Under the Satversme, the Saeima was
to be elected for a term of three years in general,
equal, direct, secret and proportional elections. The
mandate of the current Saeima ended when the new Saeima
convened for its first session.
Elections of the 1st
Saeima were held on October 7 and 8, 1922. A total of
82.2% (800,840 eligible voters) participated.
Eighty-eight candidate lists were submitted, and 46
lists won seats in the Saeima.
Of the 100 elected Saeima Members, 84
were Latvians; 62 had a higher education, 22 had a
secondary education, 7 had completed teacher training
colleges and 9 had a primary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
The number of parliamentary groups
changed; when the 1st Saeima began its work
there were 20 parliamentary groups. In the 1st
Saeima there were 20 standing committees. It held 214
plenary sessions at which 343 draft laws were debated.
Among the most important laws adopted were laws on the
structure of the Cabinet of Ministers; on associations,
unions and political organizations; and on meetings. The
first Chairman of the Saeima was Fridrihs Vesmanis. On March 20, 1925, he was succeeded by
Dr. Pauls Kalnins.
The Second Saeima
Elections of the 2nd
Saeima were held on October 3 and 4, 1925. The turnout
in the voting was 74.9% (838,800 eligible voters). Of
the 141 candidate lists submitted, 48 won seats in the
Saeima.
Of the 100 Saeima Members, 84 were
Latvians; 55 had a higher education, 30 had a secondary
education, and 15 had a primary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
The number of parliamentary groups in
the 2nd Saeima changed, and at the beginning
their number was 27. The 2nd Saeima had 20
standing committees. At 214 plenary sessions, 335 draft
laws were debated. The 2nd Saeima focused on
social and economic issues. The Chairman of the 2nd
Saeima was Dr. Pauls Kalnins.
The Third Saeima
Elections of the 3rd
Saeima were held on October 6 and 7, 1928. The turnout
was 79.3% (937,968 eligible voters). Of 120 candidate
lists, 54 won seats in the Saeima. Beginning with these
elections, the submitters of each list had to pay a
security deposit of 1,000 lats. The money was returned
if at least one candidate from the list was elected in
at least one of the constituencies.
Of the 100 Saeima Members, 80 were
Latvians; 54 had a higher education, 28 had a secondary
education, 4 had a higher or secondary military
education and 14 had a primary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
There were 20 Standing Committees and
28 parliamentary groups in the 3rd Saeima. A
total of 223 plenary sessions were held, and 344 draft
laws were debated. The Chairman of the 3rd
Saeima was Dr. Pauls Kalnins.
The Fourth Saeima
Elections of the 4th
Saeima were held on October 3 and 4, 1931. The turnout
was 80% (974,822 eligible voters). Of the 103 candidate
lists submitted, 57 won seats in the Saeima.
Of the elected 100 Members, one was a
woman; 83 were Latvians; 43 had a higher education, 39
had a secondary education, 12 had been educated at folk
schools, 3 at military schools, 1 at an agricultural
school, 1 at a trade school, and 1 Member was
self-educated. The statistical data change as the
composition of the Saeima changes.
The 4th Saeima had 18
standing committees and 25 parliamentary groups. During
185 plenary sessions, 312 draft laws were debated. Dr. Pauls Kalnins was again the Chairman of the
Saeima.
The 4th Saeima was
dissolved after the coup of May 15, 1934, and its
functions were taken over by the Cabinet of Ministers.
The Supreme Council of the Republic of
Latvia
Elections of the Supreme Council of
the Republic of Latvia were held on March 18, 1990. For
the first time since the Soviet occupation, candidates
from various political movements were allowed to run for
parliament. The turnout was 81.25% (1,593,019 eligible
voters).
Of the elected 201 members, 9 were
women; 139 were Latvians; 185 had a higher education, 5
had an incomplete higher education, and 11 had a
secondary education. The statistical data change as the
composition of the Supreme Council changes.
There were 16 standing committees in
the Supreme Council. The Supreme Council held 389
plenary sessions and adopted 404 laws, including the
Constitutional Law on the Rights and Obligations of a
Citizen and a Person. The 1937 Civil Law was reinstated,
and laws were drafted to initiate the privatization
process.
The Supreme Council specified a
transition period for the de facto restoration of
independent statehood. The transition period ended with
the convening of the 5th Saeima. The Chairman of the
Supreme Council was Anatolijs
Gorbunovs.
The Fifth Saeima
Elections of the 5th
Saeima were held on June 5 and 6, 1993. The legal basis
for the elections was the Law on the Elections of the
Fifth Saeima adopted on October 20, 1992. This was a
slightly amended and modified version of the 1922 Saeima
Election Law. The turnout was 89.9% (1,118,316 eligible
voters); 18,413 citizens living abroad took part in the
elections. Twenty-three candidate lists were submitted,
and 8 won seats in the Saeima. The others did not pass
the 4% vote threshold. Persons submitting candidate
lists had to pay a security deposit equal to 50 minimum
monthly salaries. The money was returned if at least one
candidate from the list was elected in at least one of
the constituencies.
Of the 100 elected Members, 15 were
women; 88 were Latvians; 91 had a higher education, 4
had an incomplete higher education, and 5 had a
secondary education. The statistical data change
as the composition of the Saeima changes.
The 5th Saeima had 15
standing committees. After the elections the Saeima had
eight parliamentary groups. In the spring of 1994 their
number increased by one when the Harmony for Latvia —
Rebirth of National Economy parliamentary group split
up.
The 5th Saeima held 137
plenary sessions and debated 839 draft laws. The Saeima
reinstated the Satversme and the 1925 Law on the
Structure of the Cabinet of Ministers, adopted the
Citizenship Law and the Anti-Corruption Law, implemented
local government reform, and ratified the agreement on
the complete withdrawal of the Russian armed forces from
Latvia. The Chairman of the 5th Saeima was Anatolijs
Gorbunovs.
The Sixth Saeima
The elections of the 6th
Saeima were held on September 30 and October 1, 1995. A
total of 71.9% (955,392 eligible voters) cast ballots,
including 12,501 citizens who voted abroad. Nineteen
candidate lists were submitted, and 9 won seats in the
Saeima; the others did not pass the 5% vote threshold. A
security deposit of 1,000 lats was required, and the
money was returned if at least one candidate from the
list was elected in at least one of the constituencies.
Of the 100 elected Members, 8 were
women; 90 had a higher education, 1 had an incomplete
higher education, 6 had a secondary vocational education,
and 3 had a general secondary education. The statistical
data change as the composition of the Saeima changes.
There were 16 Standing Committees
in the 6th Saeima, as well as several subcommittees
and parliamentary inquiry committees. After the
elections, nine parliamentary
groups were formed (before the 8th
Saeima parliamentary groups were called factions), but
their number changed constantly during the Saeima’s
term of office because on many occasions Members left
one parliamentary group to join another. In December
1995 the Socialist Party/Equal Rights bloc broke up, but
in November 1996 it again formed a parliamentary group
which functioned until May 1997. In July 1996 the
National Harmony Party parliamentary group broke up, but
it began functioning anew in September 1997.
The parliamentary group of the
Latvian Unity Party functioned from the elections until
February 1997. In July 1996 the Members who had left the
For Latvia parliamentary group formed a new
parliamentary group, For Nation and Justice, which
functioned until February 1997.
In June 1997 the parties For
Fatherland and Freedom and LNNK (Latvian National
Independence Movement) merged, and a parliamentary group
bearing both names was established. Prior to that, LNNK
had formed a parliamentary group with the Latvian Green
Party. After the withdrawal of LNNK in June 1997, a
parliamentary group was formed by the Latvian National
Reform Party and the Latvian Green Party. The
parliamentary group consisting of Latvia’s Farmers
Union, the Christian Democratic Union, and the Latgale
Democratic Party functioned until November 1997, when a
parliamentary group of Latvia’s Farmers Union and the
Christian Democratic Union was formed. The parliamentary
group of the people’s union Freedom functioned from
September 1997 to January 1998. On July 28, 1998, the
Labour Party, the Christian Democratic Union, and the
Latvian Green Party united to form a joint parliamentary
group, which functioned until the term of office of the
6th Saeima’s expired.
During the 6th Saeima, the
membership of the Democratic Party Saimnieks
parliamentary group increased while that of Latvia’s
Way and For Latvia parliamentary groups decreased. The
number of unaffiliated Members fluctuated, reaching more
than 20 Members at some points.
The 6th Saeima held 197
plenary sessions at which 1,335 draft laws were debated.
The 6th Saeima approved significant
amendments to the Satversme providing that parliamentary
elections henceforth would be held on one day only and
that beginning with the 7th Saeima the term
of office of the Saeima would be four years instead of
three. It also added to the Satversme a Chapter on
Fundamental Human Rights and adopted the Civil Procedure
Law.
The first Chairperson of the 6th
Saeima was Dr. Ilga Kreituse. On September 26,
1996, she was succeeded by Alfreds Cepanis.
The Seventh Saeima
In keeping with the constitutional
amendment, for the first time in the history of Latvia
the Saeima elections took place on one day only, namely,
on October 3, 1998. Altogether 944, 667 persons, or 71.9
% of all Latvian citizens eligible to vote, took part in
the elections; 10,080 Latvian citizens cast their votes
abroad. Twenty-one candidate lists were submitted, but
only 6 lists won seats in the Saeima; the other lists
did not pass the 5% vote threshold. A security deposit
of 1,000 lats was required, and the money was returned
if at least one candidate from the list was elected in
at least one of the constituencies.
Of the 100 elected
Members, 17 were women; 84 were Latvians; 94 Members
had a higher education, 4 had a secondary vocational
education, and 2 had a secondary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
There were 16
standing committees, 14 subcommittees
and 5 inquiry committees in the 7th Saeima.
After the election of the Saeima, six parliamentary
groups were formed (before the 8th Saeima
parliamentary groups were called factions). On January
5, 2001, five Members of parliament who had left the New
Party formed the New parliamentary group, which existed
until March 2002. The parliamentary group of the Union
of Latvian Social Democrats was renamed the Latvian
Social Democratic Workers’ Party parliamentary group
in May 1999. In addition, in January 2002 the Members of
parliament who had left the Latvian Social Democratic
Workers’ Party parliamentary group established the
Social Democrats Union parliamentary group.
In comparison with the previous
Saeima, there were few unaffiliated Members of
parliament during the 7th Saeima: at the
beginning of the term of office there was 1; in January
2002 there were 3; in March 2002 there were 7; and at
the end of the Saeima there were 8.
During the 7th Saeima
1,442 draft laws were reviewed, and 917 laws were
adopted. The most significant of them were the Law on
Amendments to the Constitution, the Law on the State
Administration System, the Law on Electronic Documents,
the Commercial Law, Amendments to the Law on the
Administrative Process and amendments to the Criminal
Procedure Code.
The Chairman of the 7th
Saeima was Janis Straume.
The Eighth Saeima
The elections of the 8th Saeima were
held on October 5, 2002. A total of 997,754 eligible
voters (71.51%) cast ballots, including 7,490 who voted
abroad. Twenty candidate lists were submitted; however,
only 6 parties and associations of political parties
passed the 5% vote threshold and won seats in the
Saeima.
Of the
100 elected members of parliament, there were 18
women; 79 Latvians, 14 Russians, 1 Pole, 1 Jew, 1
Karelian and 4 members who have not specified their
ethnic origin. Ninety-three members of parliament have a
higher education, 4 have a secondary vocational
education and 3 have a general secondary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
There were 17 standing committees,
13 subcommittees and 1 parliamentary inquiry committee
in the 8th Saeima. Six parliamentary
groups were formed after the elections. During the
convocation of the 8th Saeima, the number of members did
not change in the People’s Party parliamentary group and
the Greens and Farmers Union parliamentary group. The
number of members increased in the Latvia’s First Party
parliamentary group, while the number of members in the
New Era parliamentary group slightly decreased.
On 19 February 2003, 17 members of
parliament who left the For Human Rights in a United
Latvia parliamentary group formed the People’s Harmony
Party parliamentary group. The number of members in this
parliamentary group gradually decreased, and since 27
October 2005 it is called the Concord Centre
parliamentary group.
On 13 June 2003, the parliamentary
group of the Union of Political Organisations For Human
Rights in a United Latvia ceased to exist; however, it
was restored on 29 August with a different composition.
On 12 June 2003, 5 members of parliament formed Latvia’s
Socialist Party parliamentary group.
During the 8th Saeima, as during the
7th Saeima, there were few unaffiliated members of
parliament. Their number fluctuated from one to six. For
a short period – from 1 September 2003 to 9 February
2004 – there were no unaffiliated members of parliament.
During the 8th Saeima, 1,934 draft laws were reviewed,
and 1272 laws were adopted. The most significant of them
were the Law on Associations and Foundations, the Law on
Ending the Privatisation of National and Municipal
Property and Expiration of Privatisation Vouchers, and
the Criminal Procedure Law. As a result of accession to
the European Union, ceratin laws and regulations were
harmonised with the legislation of the European Union.
The Speaker of the 8th Saeima was Ingrida Udre.
The Ninth Saeima
The elections of the 9th Saeima were
held on October 7, 2006. A total of 908,979 eligible
voters (60.98%) cast ballots, including 7,580 who voted
abroad. Nineteen candidate lists were submitted; however,
only 7 parties and associations of political parties
passed the 5% vote threshold and won seats in the
Saeima.
Of the
100 elected members of parliament, there are 19
women; 78 Latvians, 15 Russians, 1 Jew, 1 Karelian, 1
German and 4 members who have not specified their ethnic
origin. Ninety-five members of parliament have a higher
education and 5 have a general secondary education. The
statistical data change as the composition of the Saeima
changes.
There are
17 standing committees in the 9th Saeima and 6
parliamentary groups.
Initially, the Speaker of the 9th
Saeima was Indulis Emsis, but since 24 September 2007
the Speaker of the 9th Saeima is Gundars Daudze.
|