Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)

The Chamber of Deputies (Spanish: Cámara de Diputados, pronounced [ˈkamaɾa de dipuˈtados]) is the lower house of the Congress of the Union, the bicameral parliament of Mexico. The other chamber is the Senate. The structure and responsibilities of both chambers of Congress are defined in Articles 50 to 70 of the constitution.

Chamber of Deputies

Cámara de Diputados
LXV Legislature
Type
Type
of the Congress of Mexico
Term limits
Renewable once consecutively
History
Founded4 October 1824 (1824-10-04)
Leadership
President
Santiago Creel (National Action Party)
since 31 August 2022
Structure
Seats500
Political groups
Government (277)
  •   MORENA (203)
  •   PVEM (41)
  •   PT (33)

Opposition (223)

  •   PAN (114)
  •   PRI (69)
  •   MC (25)
  •   PRD (15)
Length of term
3 years
Elections
Parallel voting
300 Seats elected by first-past-the-post
200 seats elected by largest remainder method
[1]
Last election
6 June 2021 (2021-06-06)
Next election
7 July 2024 (2024-07-07)
Meeting place
Chamber of Deputies
San Lázaro Legislative Building
Mexico City
Mexico
Website
Official website
Footnotes
Deputies information

History

Bicameral legislature, including the Chamber of Deputies, was established on 4 October 1824. Unicameral Congress was in place from 7 September 1857 to 13 November 1874.[2]

After being drafted, one copy of the Declaration of Independence of the Mexican Empire was given to the Provisional Governmental Board, which was later put on display in the Chamber of Deputies until 1909, when fire destroyed the location.[3]

Composition

The Chamber of Deputies is composed of one federal representative (in Spanish: diputado federal) for every 200,000 citizens. The Chamber has 500 members, elected using the parallel voting system. Elections are every 3 years.

Of these, 300 "majority deputies" are directly elected by plurality from single-member districts, the federal electoral districts (with each state divided into at least two districts). The remaining 200 "party deputies" are assigned through rules of proportional representation in 5 multi-state, 40-seat constituencies. These seats are not tied to districts; rather, they are allocated to parties based on each party's share of the national vote. The 200 party deputies are intended to counterbalance the sectional interests of the district-based representatives. Substitutes are elected at the same time as each deputy, so special elections are rare.

From 1917 to 2015, deputies were barred from serving consecutive terms in accordance with the Constitution's ban on immediate re-election to the legislature. Thus, the Chamber of Deputies was one of the few legislative bodies in the world that was completely renewed at an election. However, this changed with the 2018 elections, and deputies are now permitted to run for re-election three times consecutively. A deputy who has served two terms may serve again after sitting out one term. Congressional elections held halfway into the president's six-year mandate are known as mid-term elections.

The current composition of the Chamber of Deputies is as follows:

PartySingle-member
districts
Proportional
representation
Total seats
125
78
203
PAN
74
40
114
30
39
69
PVEM
29
12
41
PT
26
7
33
MC
9
16
25
PRD
7
8
15
Total
300
200
500

Last election

2021

Party District Proportional Total

seats

+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
MORENA–PT–PVEM 12,802,391 26.19 65 21,025,742 42.77 214 279
PAN–PRI–PRD 12,575,879 25.73 63 19,477,887 39.62 153 216
National Regeneration Movement 6,571,127 13.45 64 16,759,917 34.10 133 197 +8
National Action Party 3,828,228 7.83 33 8,969,288 18.25 78 111 +28
Institutional Revolutionary Party 2,715,123 5.56 11 8,715,899 17.73 58 69 +24
Party of the Democratic Revolution 248,505 0.51 0 1,792,700 3.64 17 17 -4
Ecologist Green Party 992,320 2.03 1 2,670,997 5.43 43 44 +28
Citizens' Movement 3,430,507 7.02 7 3,449,982 7.02 18 25 -2
Labor Party 538,832 1.10 0 1,594,828 3.24 38 38 -23
Solidarity Encounter Party 1,345,858 2.75 0 1,352,544 2.75 0 0 -8
Progressive Social Networks 865,215 1.77 0 868,515 1.77 0 0 0
Force for Mexico 1,211,824 2.48 0 1,217,084 2.48 0 0 0
Independents 44,311 0.09 0 44,311 0.09 0 0 0
Invalid/blank votes 1,662,323 3.40
Total 48,874,040 100 300 100 200 500 0
Registered voters/turnout
Source: INE

a Of the 210 seats won by the MORENA-PT–PES alliance, 97 were taken by MORENA, 57 by the PT, and 56 by the PES

b Of the 63 seats won by the PAN–PRD–MC alliance, 37 were taken by the PAN, 17 by the MC, and 9 by the PRD

c Of the 13 seats won by the PRI–PVEM–PNA alliance, 6 were taken by the PRI, 5 by the PVEM, and 2 by the PNA

Popular Vote - District
MORENA
13.44%
PAN
7.83%
MC
7.01%
PRI
5.55%
PES
2.75%
PVEM
2.03%
RSP
1.77%
PT
1.10%
PRD
0.50%
Independents
0.09%
Popular Vote (alliances) - District
JHH
26.19%
VPM
25.73%
Independents
0.09%

See also

  • President of the Chamber of Deputies Directive Board
  • Congress of Mexico
  • Senate of Mexico
  • Politics of Mexico
  • Electoral regions of Mexico

References

  1. "Mexico: Democratization Through Electoral Reform". aceproject.org. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  2. "Cāmara" (PDF). September 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  3. "Celebra SEGOB los 187 años de la firma del acta de Independencia". Presidencia de la Republica. Retrieved 24 March 2014.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.