National Assembly of the Republic of Vietnam

Quốc-hội Việt-Nam Cộng-hòa
Coat of arms or logo
Coat of arms of the Republic of Vietnam (1967–1975)
Type
Type
Unicameral (1955–1963)
Bicameral (1967–1975)
HousesSenate
House of Representatives
History
Founded1955
Disbanded30 April 1975
Preceded byNational Assembly of the First Republic of Vietnam (1955–1963)
Succeeded byNational Assembly (Vietnam)
Leadership
1st President of the National Assembly (1955–1963)
1st President of the Senate (1967–1973)
2nd President of the Senate (1973–1975)
1st Speaker of the House of Representatives (1967–1971)
2nd Speaker of the House of Representatives (1971–1975)
3rd Speaker of the House of Representatives (1975)
Structure
Seats123 members (1955–1963) 219 members (Senate: 60, House of Representatives: 159) (1967–1975)
The number of seats, and political alliances of the Republic of Vietnam in 1974
Political groups
Senate (1974)
  •   Democratic (22)
  •   United (17)
  •   Bong Hue (8)
  •   Hoa Sen (7)
  •   Unaffiliated (6)
The number of seats, and the political alliance block of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Vietnam from 1971 to 1975
Political groups
House of Representative (1971–1975)
  •   Republicans (50)
  •   Independence (39)
  •   Ethnic and Social (27)
  •   National (9)
  •   Civil Rights (16)
  •   Unaffiliated (18)
CommitteesSenate: 11
CommitteesHouse of Representative: 18
Motto
Tổ quốc – Nhân dân
Fatherland – People
Meeting place
Saigon Opera House, Saigon
Diên Hồng Hall, Saigon

The National Assembly of the Republic of Vietnam (Vietnamese: Quốc-hội Việt-Nam Cộng-hòa) was the national legislature of the Republic of Vietnam.[1]

History

The National Assembly of the Republic of Vietnam had two distinct periods under the two Republics 1955–1963 and 1967–1975. Between the two Republics was a period of military administration under the command of generals, mainly the Revolutionary Military Council, the Armed Forces Council, and the National Leadership Committee. During that period Congress was inactive.

First Republic (1955–1963)

The National Assembly of the First Republic of Vietnam according to the 1956 Constitution has 123 delegates, operating in a single chamber.

Military Rule (1963–1967)

From 1963 until 1967, the Republic of Vietnam did not have a parliament. The generals who came to power had established some mechanism to recruit civilian contributions, but there was no general election at the national level.

Second Republic (1967–1975)

The first National Assembly after the end of the First Republic was the Constituent Assembly, which convened to draft a new constitution for the civil polity, absorbing administrative power from the generals. A total of 532 candidates ran for 117 seats in the September 11, 1966 election.[2][3] A total of 4,274,872 turned out to vote, representing 80.8% of the registered electorate.[4] About six months later, the basic law was finalized to issue a proclamation on March 18, 1967, the 1967 Constitution.[5] On April 1, 1967, a new Constitution was promulgated.[2]

1967 Elections

The 1967 elections elected the regular parliament and the 1966 constitutional assembly was dissolved. Then the National Assembly of the Second Republic of Vietnam operated within the framework of Chapter III of that constitution. Unlike the First Republic, this National Assembly is divided into two houses: the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Senate

The Senate has 60 members, called "senators", who are elected by the people in a partnership for six-year terms. Each coalition is 10 people, so the Senate is the six coalitions with the most votes. Unlike a member of the House of Representatives, which depends on a locality, the congressional consortium represents the whole country. The headquarters of the Senate is Dien Hong Hall.[6] This building in 2000 was used as the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange.

The last Senate session before the fall of South Vietnam consisted of two groups. One group belongs to the elected term in 1970. The other half belongs to the term elected to 1973, that is, every three years, 30 of the 60 seats in the Senate must be contested. The Senate has 11 standing committees.

As of 1974 the Senate had five blocks:[7]

  1. Democratic Bloc, 22 MPs, pro-government
  2. United Bloc, 17 MPs
  3. The Bong Hue bloc, 8 MPs, opposes the government
  4. Hoa Sen Bloc, 7 MPs, in opposition to the government
  5. Unlinked block (unaffiliated), 6 MPs

House of Representatives

The first House of Representatives (1967–1971) had 137 delegates,[8] called "deputies" who were directly elected by the people based on each locality. By the 2nd term (1971–1975), it was increased to 159 deputies.[9] As of 1974, there was one congressman for every 50,000 voters. The term of parliament is four years. MPs are allocated to work on 18 standing committees. The headquarters of the House of Representatives is the House of the National Assembly in Lam Son Square,[10] after 1975 it was turned into the Ho Chi Minh City Theater.

The last House of Representatives before the fall of the Republic of Vietnam, was elected in August 1971, the 2nd term. The next election was supposed to take place in 1975

In the 1970s the House of Representatives had six blocks:[11]

  1. Republican Bloc, 50 congressmen, pro-government
  2. Independence Bloc, 39 MPs
  3. Ethnic and Social Bloc, 27 MPs, opposes the government under the leadership of lawyer Tran Van Tuyen
  4. National Bloc, 9 MPs
  5. Civil Rights Block, 16 MPs
  6. Unlinked block (unaffiliated), 18 MPs

Notable members

References

  1. Department of State (1974). Background Notes (South) Viet-Nam. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.
  2. 1 2 Taylor, K W, ed. Voices from the Second Republic of South Vietnam (1967–1975). Ithaca, NY: Cornell Southeast Asia Program Publications, 2014. Tr 122-6
  3. "Hiến pháp Việt Nam Cộng hòa nói gì về đảng phái? – Kỳ 1"
  4. Penniman, Howard R. Elections in South Vietnam. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, 1972. Tr 36–41
  5. ""QUỐC HỘI LẬP HIẾN Chung quyết trong phiên họp Ngày 18 tháng 3 năm 1967"". Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 2015-08-29.
  6. Service de Presse du Sénat. tr 38
  7. Service de Presse du Sénat. tr 37
  8. Hoàng Cơ Thụy. Việt sử khảo luận. Paris: Nam Á, 2002. tr 3396
  9. Department of State. Background Notes (South) Viet-Nam. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1974. tr 8
  10. Service de Presse du Sénat. tr 34
  11. Service de Presse du Sénat. tr 33
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