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Parliament of Uganda
Unicameral legislature of Uganda
Unicameral legislature of Uganda
| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| background_color | #323233 | ||
| name | Parliament of Uganda | ||
| Bunge la Uganda | |||
| legislature | Twelfth Parliament | ||
| coa_pic | Coat of arms of Uganda.svg | ||
| coa_res | 110px | ||
| house_type | Unicameral | ||
| foundation | 1962 | ||
| preceded_by | Legislative Council | ||
| new_session | 24 May 2021 | ||
| leader1_type | Speaker | ||
| leader1 | Anita Among | ||
| party1 | NRM | ||
| election1 | 25 March 2022 | ||
| leader2_type | Deputy Speaker | ||
| leader2 | Thomas Tayebwa | ||
| party2 | NRM | ||
| election2 | 25 March 2022 | ||
| leader3_type | Prime Minister | ||
| leader3 | Robinah Nabbanja | ||
| party3 | NRM | ||
| election3 | 21 June 2021 | ||
| leader4_type | Government Chief Whip | ||
| leader4 | Denis Obua | ||
| party4 | NRM | ||
| election4 | 16 August 2022 | ||
| leader5_type | Leader of the Opposition | ||
| leader5 | Joel Ssenyonyi | ||
| party5 | NUP | ||
| election5 | 9 January 2024 | ||
| leader6_type | Chief Opposition Whip | ||
| leader6 | John Nambeshe | ||
| party6 | NUP | ||
| election6 | 24 May 2021 | ||
| seats | 529 | ||
| structure1 | Uganda Election 2021.svg | ||
| structure1_res | 270px | ||
| political_groups1 | Government (336) | ||
| * {{Color box | #FFEE00 | border | silver}} NRM (336) |
| * {{Color box | #C62127 | border | silver}} NUP (57) |
| * {{Color box | #00BFFF | border | silver}} FDC (32) |
| * {{Color box | #0C713A | border | silver}} DP (9) |
| * {{Color box | #FF0000 | border | silver}} UPC (9) |
| * {{Color box | #2D3194 | border | silver}} JEEMA (1) |
| * {{Color box | #D38135 | border | silver}} PPP (1) |
| * {{Color box | #DDDDDD | border | silver}} Independents (74) |
| * {{Color box | #000000 | border | silver}} Military (10) |
| term_length | 5 years | ||
| voting_system1 | Parallel voting: | ||
| First-past-the-post voting (499 seats) | |||
| Indirect election (30 seats) | |||
| first_election1 | 25 April 1962 | ||
| last_election1 | 15 January 2026 | ||
| next_election1 | 15 January 2031 | ||
| session_room | The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi delivering his address in Parliament of Uganda, at Kampala on July 25, 2018. The President of Uganda, Mr. Yoweri K. Museveni is also seen (1).JPG | ||
| session_res | 270px | ||
| meeting_place | Parliament Avenue, Kampala | ||
| website | |||
| constitution | Constitution of Uganda |
Bunge la Uganda
- NRM (336) Opposition (109)
- NUP (57)
- FDC (32)
- DP (9)
- UPC (9)
- JEEMA (1)
- PPP (1) Others (84)
- Independents (74)
- Military (10) First-past-the-post voting (499 seats) Indirect election (30 seats)
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The Parliament of Uganda is the unicameral legislature of the Republic of Uganda. One of its primary functions is to pass laws that support effective governance in the country. Government ministers are required to answer to the people's representatives on the floor of the house and may be appointed from amongst its members.
Through the various parliamentary committees, parliament scrutinises government programmes, particularly as outlined in the State of the Nation address by the president. Fiscal matters, such as taxation and loans, require parliamentary approval after appropriate debate.Parliament also holds the authority to confirm certain presidential nominations and, through a motion of censure, may compel a Minister to resign.
Composition
The 11th Parliament (2021–2026) has a total of 557 seats, including 353 representatives elected using first-past-the-post voting in single winner constituencies. Using the same method, 146 seats reserved for women are filled, with one seat per district. Finally, 30 seats are indirectly filled via special electoral colleges: 10 by the army, 5 by youths, 5 by elders, 5 by unions, 5 by people with disabilities and 28 Ex Officio Members. In each of these groups, at least one woman must be elected (at least two for the army group).
In 2016, it was composed of 288 constituency representatives, 121 district woman representatives, ten Uganda People's Defence Force representatives, five representatives of the youth, five representatives of persons with disabilities, five representatives of workers, and seventeen ex officio members.
History
The Ugandan parliament was established in 1962, soon after the country's independence.
First Parliament (1962–1963)

This body was then known as the National Assembly. It had 92 members and was presided over, as speaker, by Sir John Bowes Griffin, a British lawyer and former Ugandan Chief Justice.
Second Parliament (1963–1971)
During this period, Prime Minister Milton Obote abrogated the constitution and declared himself President of Uganda in 1966. This parliament also witnessed the abolition of Uganda's traditional kingdoms and the declaration of Uganda as a republic. This decision was impacted by the legal counsel of Member of Parliament A. G. Mehta following the Ugandan Constitutional Conference in which Uganda became an independent nation. The speaker during the Second Parliament was Narendra M. Patel, a Ugandan of Indian descent. This parliament ended when Idi Amin overthrew Milton Obote's government in January 1971.
Third Parliament (1979–1980)
Following the overthrow of Idi Amin in April 1979, a new legislative body known as the Uganda Legislative Council was established. With an initial membership of 30, the membership was later increased to 120. This was the Third Parliament and was chaired by Edward Rugumayo. This legislative body continued to function until the general elections of December 1980.
Fourth Parliament (1980–1985)
This period marked the return to power of Milton Obote and the Uganda People's Congress (UPC), following the disputed national elections of 1980. The speaker of the Fourth Parliament was Francis Butagira, a Harvard-trained lawyer. the Fourth Parliament ended when General Basilio Olara Okello overthrew Obote and the UPC government in 1985.
Fifth Parliament (1986–1996)
Known as the National Resistance Council (NRC), the Fifth Parliament was established following the end of the Ugandan Bush War (1980–1986). Starting with 38 historical members of the National Resistance Movement and National Resistance Army, the legislative body was gradually expanded to include representatives from around the country. The speaker during the Fifth Parliament was Yoweri Museveni, who also concurrently served as the President of Uganda.
Sixth Parliament (1996–2001)
The Sixth Parliament was constituted during one-party rule (NRM). James Wapakhabulo served as speaker from 1996 until 1998. From 1998 until 2001, Francis Ayume, a member of Parliament from Koboko District, served as speaker.
Seventh Parliament (2001–2006)
The Seventh Parliament was presided over as Speaker by Edward Ssekandi. The most controversial legislation passed during this period was the amendment of the constitution to remove presidential term limits.
Eighth Parliament (2006–2011)
This was a continuation of the Seventh Parliament, with Edward Ssekandi as speaker and Rebecca Kadaga as deputy speaker.
Ninth Parliament (2011–2016)
The Ninth Parliament was presided over by Rebecca Kadaga as speaker, and Jacob Oulanyah as deputy speaker.
Tenth Parliament (2016–2021)
In the Tenth Parliament, Rebecca Kadaga and Jacob Oulanyah remained in their posts as speaker and deputy speaker respectively.
2017 Parliament fight
On September 27, 2017, a fight ensued during a legislative session of the Ugandan parliament. The legislation in discussion at the time was to remove the presidential age limit of 75 from the Ugandan constitution. Following accusations from the parliamentary speaker against certain lawmakers in the chamber of disorderly conduct, a full-fledged fight broke out in which chairs were thrown, microphone stands used as clubs, and eventual removal of some members by plain clothes security officers.
Eleventh Parliament (2021–''2026'')
On March 25, 2022, Thomas Tayebwa was voted as the new Deputy Speaker of the Parliament of Uganda.
Twelfth Parliament (2026–present)
Main article: List of members of the twelfth Parliament of Uganda
Ugandan legislation
Examples of Uganda's legislation include:
- The amendment of the constitution to remove presidential term limits.
- The Employment Act, 2006, Act 6 of 2006
- The Anti-Homosexuality Act, 2014
- The Anti-Homosexuality Act, 2023
The Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII) publishes the laws of Uganda, allowing for free online access.
Notes
References
References
- (2021-06-04). "Is the State of the Nation address relevant?".
- "Functions of The Parliament of Uganda".
- (2018-01-18). "Composition of Parliament".
- "Constitution".
- "Electoral handbook".
- "Elections: Uganda National Assembly 2021".
- "Composition of Uganda's Parliament".
- "Chronology of the Parliaments of Uganda".
- [https://www.newvision.co.ug/articledetails/1437232 ''"Uganda Constitutional Conference, 1961"'']. ''New Vision''. October 2016.
- Great Britain, ed. (1961). ''Uganda: report of the Uganda Constitutional Conference, 1961 and text of the agreed draft of a new Buganda agreement initialled in London on 9th October, 1961''. Cmnd. London: H.M.S.O.
- (2 October 2017). "Fighting in parliament as Uganda ejects MPs".
- (2022-03-25). "I'll use Deputy Speaker's office to serve Ugandans' interests - Tayebwa".
- Uganda Legal Information Institute, [https://ulii.org/akn/ug/act/2006/6/eng%402006-06-08 Employment Act, 2006], accessed 10 June 2024
- Uganda Legal Information Institute, [https://ulii.org/ Welcome to the Uganda Legal Information Institute], accessed 10 June 2024
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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