Parliament of Morocco
The Parliament of Morocco is the bicameral legislature of Morocco. It is located in Rabat.
History
The traditional representative system in Morocco was organized through traditional structures such as the ulema assembly by cities and regions, or the Jemaa assembly within the tribes. These structures were not elected, but nominated through a cooptation system.Starting from 1880, Morocco began a range of reforms to adapt its institutions to modern standards. Among these reforms the creation of the position of grand vizier, having a structured and durable cabinet, with six ministries, including foreign affairs, finance, defense etc. In the process, the Sultan Abdelaziz decided to create a consultative assembly in 1904, which he named Majlis el Aayane. It is this assembly that summoned the international conference of Algeciras, and that drafted the constitution of 1908, which never entered into force because of the political unrests.
The Majlis el Ayane was dissolved in 1913, as a result of the Treaty of Fes, which established the French Protectorate. But since 1947, on impulse Erik Labonne, Resident General of France in Morocco, and the Sultan Muhammad V, the protectorate creates consultative chambers reserved for Moroccans, Jews and Muslims. These elected chambers, through the elections of 1947 and 1951, were in reality only a weak response of the protectorate system to the nationalists claims expressed en 1944 manifesto of independence. The Istiqlal who accept to participate in the 1947 elections, earning three elected representatives, eventually boycott the 1951 elections.
At the end of 1955, and after the return from exile of Sultan Mohammed V, November 16, and the victory of nationalists, Morocco adopted in a first step, a non-elected parliament, resulting from consultations with the main political parties to lay the foundations for future elections. The first chamber was chaired by Mehdi Ben Barka. The first Moroccan Constitution adopted in 1963 created a bicameral parliament consisting of the House of Representatives and House of Councillors.
The 1970 Constitution abolished the bicameralism legislature and established a unicameral parliament.
The 1992 Constitution established the introduction of inquiries of investigation.
Elections
The 2011 Moroccan general election witnessed the Islamist party, the Justice and Development Party, winning the largest number of seats, making up 22.78% of the parliament. It remained the largest party after the 2016 general election, winning 125 of the 395 seats in the House of Representatives, a gain of 18 seats from 2011. Abdelillah Benkirane was reappointed Prime Minister by the King on 10 October. The Authenticity and Modernity Party won 102 seats, and the remainder were split among smaller parties.In the 2021 Moroccan general election, the PJD suffered an electoral wipeout, with the liberal National Rally of Independents becoming the largest party in Parliament. Its leader, Aziz Akhannouch, subsequently formed a coalition government with the PAM and Istiqlal Party.
Composition
Since 1996, the national legislature has become bicameral and has therefore two parliamentary chambers:- The House of Representatives or the lower house. 395 members elected directly for a five-year term.
- The House of Councillorss 120 members are elected indirectly for a six-year term by two sets of electoral colleges.