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Argentine National Congress

Bicameral legislature of Argentina


Bicameral legislature of Argentina

FieldValue
nameNational Congress of Argentina
native_nameCongreso de la Nación Argentina
coa_picLogoCongreso.svg
coa_res200
house_typeBicameral
housesSenate
Chamber of Deputies
leader1_typePresident of the Senate &
Vice President
leader1Victoria Villarruel
party1LLA
election110 December 2023
leader2_typeProvisional President of the Senate
leader2Bartolomé Abdala
party2LLA
election213 December 2023
leader3_typePresident
of the Chamber of Deputies
leader3Martín Menem
party3LLA
election310 December 2023
seats329 members
house1Senate
house2Chamber of Deputies
structure1Senado de la Nación Argentina (2025-2027).svg
structure1_res250px
structure2Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina (2025-2027).svg
structure2_res250px
*{{color box#6C4C99bordersilver}} LLA (21)
*{{color box#FFD700bordersilver}} PRO (4)
*{{color box#255fcfbordersilver}} Independencia (1)
*{{color box#E10019bordersilver}} UCR (10)
*{{color box#19BC9Dbordersilver}} United Provinces (3)
*{{color box#0A1172bordersilver}} Federal Innovation (4)
*{{color box#0D69B4bordersilver}} For Santa Cruz (2)
*{{color box#00BEFFbordersilver}} UP (28)
*{{color box#6C4C99bordersilver}} LLA (95)
*{{color box#ffd700bordersilver}} PRO-UCR-MID-ABA-XCS (22)
*{{color box#d6d015bordersilver}} PyT (2)
*{{color box#fc4c0cbordersilver}} United Provinces (22)
*{{color box#0a1172bordersilver}} IF (7)
*{{color box#255fcfbordersilver}} Independencia (3)
*{{color box#255fcfbordersilver}} Elijo Catamarca (3)
*{{color box#e6ccefbordersilver}} País Federal (3)
*{{color box#98142Bbordersilver}} Defendamos Córdoba (1)
*{{color box#28AB5Fbordersilver}} La Neuquindad (1)
*{{color box#888888bordersilver}} Other (1)
*{{color box#009FE3bordersilver}} UP (93)
*{{color box#ED4D57bordersilver}} FIT-U (4)
last_election126 October 2025
last_election226 October 2025
next_election12027
next_election22027
session_roomArgentine National Congress (Pedestrians digitally removed) (8081437098).jpg
session_res250px
meeting_placeArgentine National Congress Palace
Buenos Aires, Argentina
website

Chamber of Deputies Vice President](vice-president-of-argentina) of the Chamber of Deputies](list-of-presidents-of-the-argentine-chamber-of-deputies)

  • 72 Senators (List)
  • 257 Deputies (List) Government (21)
  • LLA (21) Allies (5)
  • PRO (4)
  • Independencia (1) Independents (19)
  • UCR (10)
  • United Provinces (3)
  • Federal Innovation (4)
  • For Santa Cruz (2) Opposition (28)
  • UP (28) Government (95)
  • LLA (95) Allies (24)
  • PRO-UCR-MID-ABA-XCS (22)
  • PyT (2) Independent (41)
  • United Provinces (22)
  • IF (7)
  • Independencia (3)
  • Elijo Catamarca (3)
  • País Federal (3)
  • Defendamos Córdoba (1)
  • La Neuquindad (1)
  • Other (1) Opposition (97)
  • UP (93)
  • FIT-U (4)

Buenos Aires, Argentina The National Congress of Argentina () is the legislative branch of the government of Argentina. Its composition is bicameral, constituted by a 72-seat Senate and a 257-seat Chamber of Deputies. The Senate, a third of whose members are elected to six-year renewable terms every two years, consists of three representatives from each province and the federal capital. The Chamber of Deputies, whose members are elected to four-year terms, is apportioned according to population, and renews their members by a half each two years.

The Congressional Palace is located in Buenos Aires, at the western end of Avenida de Mayo (at the other end of which is located the Casa Rosada). The Kilometre Zero for all Argentine National Highways is marked on a milestone at the Congressional Plaza, next to the building.

Attributes

The Argentine National Congress is bicameral, composed of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. The ordinary sessions span is from March 1 to November 30; the President of Argentina is entitled to convene extraordinary sessions during the recess, if needed. Senators and deputies enjoy parliamentary immunity during their mandates, which may be revoked by their peers if a senator or deputy is caught in flagrante, in the midst of committing a crime.

The Congress rules the Central Bank of Argentina, manages internal and external debt payment, and the value of national currency (currently the Argentine peso). It rules the legal codes on Civil, Commercial, Penal, Minery, Work and Social Welfare affairs, all of which cannot be in contradiction with the respective provincial codes. Any changes on national or provincial limits, or the creation of new provinces, ought to be allowed by the Congress.

The Congress is entitled to approve or reject every international treaty that Argentina signs with other states or international organizations. When approved, the treaties acquire priority over ordinary legislation. Declarations of war and the signing of peace, as well as the mobilization of the national troops, within or outside of the Argentine territory must be allowed by the Congress. The Chamber of Deputies is the lower House of the National Congress. It holds exclusive rights to set taxes and customs; to draft troops; and to accuse the President, Ministers, and members of the Supreme Court before the Senate. Additionally, the Chamber of Deputies receives for consideration bills presented by popular initiative.

The Senate is the upper House of the National Congress. It must obtain quorum to deliberate, this being an absolute majority. It has the power to approve bills passed by the Chamber of Deputies, call for joint sessions with the Lower House or special sessions with experts and interested parties, and submit bills for the president's signature; bills introduced in the Senate must, in turn, be approved by the Lower House for their submittal to the president. The Senate must introduce any changes to federal revenue sharing policies, ratify international treaties, approve changes to constitutional or federal criminal laws, as well as confirm or impeach presidential nominees to the cabinet, the judiciary, the armed forces, and the diplomatic corps, among other federal posts.

History

From 1976 to 1983, the Congressional Palace of Argentina housed the CAL (Legislative Advisory Commission), a group of officers from the three Armed Forces. Commissioned to review and discuss laws before they were issued by the Executive Branch, they served a succession of de facto military presidents during the National Reorganization Process. In practice, this became a mechanism to detect and discuss the differences between the three commanders-in-chief of the Army, Navy, and Air Force regarding a specific project. The CAL was established by the Acta del Proceso de Reorganización Nacional (National Reorganization Process Act), the guiding document for the military government established after the coup d'état of March 24, 1976.

Following a 1994 reform of the Constitution, the Senate was expanded from 48 members (two per province or district) to 72 members, whereby the party garnering second place in elections for Senator would be assured the third seat for the corresponding province.

Representation

Each province elects 3 Senators to the Senate, whereas every 161,000 Argentine citizens elect a Deputy. Currently, there are 72 Senators and 257 National Deputies in the Congress.

DistrictNumber of SenatorsNumber of DeputiesTotal72257
Autonomous City of Buenos Aires325
Province of Buenos Aires370
Province of Catamarca35
Province of Chaco37
Province of Chubut35
Province of Córdoba318
Province of Corrientes37
Province of Entre Ríos39
Province of Formosa35
Province of Jujuy36
Province of La Pampa35
Province of La Rioja35
Province of Mendoza310
Province of Misiones37
Province of Neuquén35
Province of Río Negro35
Province of Salta37
Province of San Juan36
Province of San Luis35
Province of Santa Cruz35
Province of Santa Fe319
Province of Santiago del Estero37
Province of Tierra del Fuego35
Province of Tucumán39

Bibliography

References

References

  1. (24 January 2024). "Jaldo pidió no acompañar el rechazo del peronismo a la ley de Milei y se retobó Yedlin". La Política Online.
  2. Argentine Constitution, art. 63
  3. Argentine Constitution, art. 69
  4. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.6
  5. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.7
  6. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.11
  7. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.12
  8. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.15
  9. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.22
  10. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.25
  11. Argentine Constitution, art. 75, i.28
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