National Legislature of Sudan

National Legislature of Sudan

الهيئة التشريعية الوطنية السودانية
Type
Type
HousesCouncil of States
(upper house)
National Assembly
(lower house)
History
Founded2005
Disbanded2019
Succeeded byTransitional Legislative Council
Leadership
Speaker of the Council of States
Speaker of the National Assembly
Structure
Seats458
  • Council of States: 32
  • National Assembly: 426
Council of States political groups
  •   Partisan (28)
  •   Vacant (4)
National Assembly political groups
Government (323)

Opposition (103)

Elections
Indirect election
Mixed member majoritarian:
Last Council of States election
19 May 2015
Last National Assembly election
13–16 April 2015
Meeting place
Omdurman, Sudan
Website
The National Legislature (permanent dead link)

The National Legislature of Sudan (Arabic: الهيئة التشريعية الوطنية السودانية, al-maǧlis at-tašrīʿī) is the legislative branch of the government of Sudan.

Prior to the 2019 coup d'état, it was composed of two chambers:

  • The Council of States (مجلس الولايات السوداني, al-maǧlis al-wilāyāt).
  • The National Assembly (الجمعية الوطنية السودانية, al-maǧlis al-waṭaniy).

The National Legislature was dissolved on 11 April 2019 following the overthrow of President Omar al-Bashir and his National Congress Party in a military coup.[1]

As part of the Sudanese transition to democracy, a Transitional Legislative Council was to have been formed which would function as the legislature of Sudan until elections initially scheduled for 2022.[2]

Amendments made to the transitional constitution in February 2025, established a "Transitional Legislative Authority" made up of the members of the Transitional Sovereignty Council and Cabinet of Sudan to act as an interim legislature until a Transitional Legislative Council is formally established.[3]

Latest election

National Assembly

PartyProportionalWomenConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats
National Congress Party3,915,59078.32674,321,90183.37107149323–1
Democratic Unionist Party–Original218,1204.364249,7684.8261525+24
Umma Collective Leadership214,5314.29426+5
Democratic Unionist Party114,8062.302137,2652.6531015+11
Federal Umma Party79,2921.591107,1022.07337+4
Freedom and Justice Party60,3731.21136,8990.71113
United Umma Party49,9231.00163,7701.23214
Umma Reform and Development Party35,3090.71145,1990.87135
National Umma Party30,9660.62123+2
Federal Truth Party30,2540.61133,0460.64102
National Bond Party30,0790.60143,1990.83102
National Freedom and Justice Party29,6420.59134
Constitution Party27,4660.55039,7830.77101
Movement for Justice and Equality26,7230.53018,4930.36000
National Reform Party25,9900.52030,1070.58101
Popular Forces for Rights and Democracy Movement23,0890.46027,2600.53101
Justice Party18,1960.36000
National Movement for Peace and Development17,2310.34014,7320.28000
Sudanese Socialist Democratic Union16,5080.33000
People's Movement Party14,0180.28015,5950.30011
Sudanese National Front Party12,7400.25000
Sudanese Socialist Union Party al-Maywa8,6860.17000
Centre Party for Justice and Development11
General Federation of North and South Funj11
Ana al-Sudan11
Black Free11
Independents1919+16
Total4,999,532100.00855,184,119100.00128213426–24
Registered voters/turnout13,126,98913,126,98913,126,989
Source: NEC

Parliament building

The seat of the National Legislature is in Omdurman, immediately north-west of the country's capital Khartoum. The building was designed in the style of brutalist architecture by the Romanian architect Cezar Lăzărescu and completed in 1978.[4] It is located on the banks of the White Nile at the confluence with the Blue Nile near the old Omdurman bridge.

See also

References

  1. ^ Sarah El Sirgany, Nima Elbagir and Yasir Abdullah (11 April 2019). "Sudan's President Bashir forced out in military coup". CNN.
  2. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-08-05. Retrieved 2019-08-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ https://sudantribune.com/article297812/
  4. ^ "National Assembly of Sudan". #SOSBRUTALISM. Retrieved 2021-05-19.