The National Assembly exercises supremelegislative power. It adopts and amends theConstitution, laws, electsGovernment, appoints state officials such as the Supreme Public Prosecutor,Ombudsman, Governor of theNational Bank of Serbia, President of the State Audit Institution. All decisions are made bymajority vote of deputies at the session at which a majority of deputies are present, except for amending the Constitution, when a two-thirds majority is needed.[2]
The beginning of the 19th century and the outbreak of theSerbian Revolution saw the establishment of proto-assembly called People's Council (Serbian:Народни совјет,romanized: Narodni sovjet) in 1805. Those assemblies were convened either by the Prince or by the Governing Council and were almost always held in the open spaces with hundreds and often thousands of people attending.[4] At one of them, the Sretenje Assembly, the first Serbian constitution,Sretenje Constitution, was ratified.
The modern National Assembly was established at theSaint Andrew's Day Assembly in 1858 when the Defenders of the Constitution performed a dynastic coup again, this time returning the house of Obrenović to the throne.[7] The assembly was named the Serbian National Assembly and it kept its name until it ceased to exist in 1918, after formation of unified Yugoslav state. Sessions were initially held every three years, although this was later changed over the time, and sessions were either held once a year.[4] The first act regardingMPs and first set of rules of procedure were adopted in 1870.[4]
The Assembly could be either ordinary or great. Great Assembly was usually convened for electing the Prince (or King) or changing/adopting the Constitution. The convening, opening, concluding, postponing, prolonging, and dissolving of the Assembly were prerogatives of the Prince (or King). Sessions were opened by the Prince's (or King's) speech, responded to by the Assembly with the address. Voting was either individual (by name) i.e. by deputy sitting or standing, or by secret ballot. Voting by name was administered when final texts of acts were considered, and whenever the Government or at least twenty deputies demanded it. Chairmen and Deputy Chairmen of the assembly were at first time elected by the Prince (or King) from six candidates proposed by the Assembly; since adoption of the 1888 Constitutions, they were elected by the deputies. Initially, every deputy was elected for 500 taxpayers, then for 1000, then 2000, and finally for 4,500 taxpayers, and with that electoral formula the number of deputies were determined, oscillating between 120 and 160 (Great National Assemblies could number more than 600 deputies). Suffrage was held by every native or naturalised Serbian citizen over 21 years of age and paying tax on his estate, work, or income. Women did not have suffrage. Until 1888, public voting was practiced at elections: the voter would publicly declare "whom he wanted for deputy" at the polling station; the votes were noted and tallied. Secret ballot was introduced in the 1888 Constitution and was performed with little balls. The Assembly was unicameral, except from 1901 to 1903. Deputies could not be called to account, held in custody or imprisoned without the Assembly's authorisation. Even if they were caught in the act, the Assembly's opinion on whether they should be judicially prosecuted had to be heard. During theSerbian-Ottoman Wars (1876–1878), theBalkan Wars (1912–1913), the World War I (1914–1915), the Assembly was in permanent session.
With the creation of theKingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes in 1918, the Serbian National Assembly ceased to exist. The Serbian National Assembly met for the last time on December 14, 1918, to elect 84 Deputies from its ranks to the Interim Popular Representative Body of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes.
After the World War II, Serbia became one of the six constituent republics of the new socialist, federalYugoslav state. TheAnti-fascist Assembly for the National Liberation of Serbia (ASNOS), held from 9 to 12 November 1944 in Belgrade, was attended by 989 deputies. They were not elected by the people, but delegated from the ranks of the people's liberation committees, formed by theCommunist Party of Yugoslavia. In 1945, the ASNOS transformed itself into the People's Assembly of Serbia. After the war, the Communists ran unopposed in the 1945 elections; all opposition parties boycotted the elections due to coercion and intimidation by theOZNA secret police and the Communist Party, aimed at eliminating electoral dissent.[8] Once in power, the Communists introduced a single-party political system, with the Communist Party of Yugoslavia as the ruling party and theCommunist Party of Serbia as a branch party. This system lasted until 1990 and the adoption of the new Serbian constitution.
The 1990 Constitution established the present-day National Assembly, as a unicameral body with 250 deputies. By its provisions,multi-party political system was reintroduced, the delegate-based system was replaced by a deputy-based one.
The President of the National Assembly (Serbian:Председник Народне скупштине,romanized: Predsednik Narodne skupštine) represents the National Assembly, convokes its sessions, presides over them, and performs other official activities. By means ofmajority votes of all deputies, the National Assembly elects the president of the assembly and one or more vice-presidents (deputy speakers), usually one vice-president from each parliamentary group. In case the president of the assembly is temporarily absent, one of the vice-presidents designated by them stands in for them. If the president of the assembly does not designate any of the vice-presidents to stand in for them, the oldest vice-president shall stand in for them.[2]
The Secretariat-General of the National Assembly (Serbian:Генерални секретаријат Народне скупштине,romanized: Generalni sekretarijat Narodne skupštine) is a body in charge of administrative work of the assembly. It is headed by the Secretary-General of the National Assembly who is appointed by the National Assembly and is not a deputy. Secretary-General assists the president of the assembly and vice-presidents in preparing and chairing sessions. His/her term of office is terminated upon the constitution of a newly elected assembly, while he/she shall continue discharging duties until the appointment of a new secretary-general.[2]
The National Assembly is composed of deputies elected on the basis of direct, universal, and equal suffrage by secret ballot. Parliamentary elections are held after the four-year term of the previous convocation of the National Assembly has expired, but can also be held before that if the National Assembly dismisses the Government or the Government resigns and no majority can be reached to elect a new Government. Elections are called by thePresident of Serbia 90 days before the end of the term of convocation of the National Assembly, so that elections are held within the following 60 days. Elections areclosed party-list proportional with the entire country one electoral district and 250 seats then distributed between the lists usingd'Hondt method. There is a minimumvoting threshold of 3% so that only the party lists which get more than 3% of the votes are awarded the seats. There is no threshold for theethnic minority party lists. After the elections, the first session of the new Assembly is convened by the President of the National Assembly from the previous convocation, so that the session is held not later than 30 days from the day of announcement of the final election results.[2]
The National Assembly is composed of 250deputies (Serbian:народни посланици,romanized: narodni poslanici). Deputies may not hold dual functions which represent aconflict of interest.[2] Deputies enjoyparliamentary immunity. If deputy's mandate ended before the dissolution of the assembly, the right to fill the vacant position is awarded to the first candidate from the same electoral list who was not awarded a mandate and that, in the event of a resignation of a member elected on a coalition list, the vacant mandate would fall to the first candidate on the list from the same party who was not awarded a mandate.[9]
Any grouping of five or more deputies can be officially recognised as aparliamentary group (Serbian:посланичка група,romanized: poslanička grupa), with each deputy permitted to be members of only a single group at any one time. Although groups are mostly based onelectoral lists from the parliamentary elections, groups are often a diverse collection of different parties as well asindependents. This is due to Serbia's complexmulti-party system, with many parties having a presence in the legislature; parties with similar ideology, but low representation, are therefore inclined to cooperate and form joint parliamentary groups together to secure more privileges they would otherwise not be entitled to, such as additional speaking time and committee assignments. The parliamentary groups are each led by a president, who are usually assisted by a number of vice-presidents; it is common practice for heterogeneous groups (i.e. ones which comprise two or more parties) to have a vice-president from the junior party in the group. The presidents of the parliamentary groups regularly meet with the President of the National Assembly to discuss and arrange the agenda for plenary sessions.
Assembly committees (Serbian:скупштински одбори,romanized: skupštinski odbori) arestanding committees of the National Assembly established to consider and review issues falling within the purview of the National Assembly, to propose official documents, as well as to carry out reviews of policies pursued, and laws, by-laws, and other regulations implemented by the Government, to be done by each Committee for the field that falls within its purview; and also to perform other duties foreseen by the Rules of Procedure. There are 20 standing committees, and each committee may appoint one or more sub-committees to consider certain issues from its purview. Before being considered by the National Assembly, a bill is considered by competent Assembly committees and the Government (if it is not the submitter of the bill). In their opinion, the committees and the Government may propose that the National Assembly accept or reject the bill. Parliamentary groups nominate members for each assembly committee proportionally to the number of deputies they have at the National Assembly.[2]
TheRules of Procedure of the National Assembly regulate the organisation and work of the assembly and the manner in which the deputies' rights and duties are exercised.[2]
The Small Chamber
The first session of the newly-elected assembly is convened by the President of the National Assembly from the previous convocation. The first sitting of the assembly is chaired by the oldest deputy, function similar to thefather of the house in common-law countries. The oldest deputy is assisted in his/her work by the youngest deputy from each of the four party lists that polled the largest number of seats, and by the Secretary-General of the National Assemblyfrom the previous convocation. At the first sitting of the assembly, the President of the National Assembly, vice-presidents, and the members of the assembly committees are elected and the Secretary-General is appointed.
The National Assembly is convoked for two regular sessions per year, starting on the first workdays of March and October. The assembly is convoked for extraordinary session at the request of at least one-third of the deputies or the request of the Government, with previously determined agenda. The National Assembly can be convoked without an announcement upon the declaration of the state of war or state of emergency. The proposed agenda for a National Assembly sitting is prepared by the President of the National Assembly. Aquorum for the work of the assembly exists if a minimum of one-third of deputies are present at the assembly sitting. The quorum for the work of the assembly on voting days exists if at least 126 deputies are present at the sitting. The National Assembly adopts decisions bymajority vote of deputies at the session at which the majority of deputies are present. The deputies vote "For" a motion, "Against" a motion, or abstain from voting.[2]
The right to propose laws, other regulations, and general acts belongs to every deputy, the government, assemblies of autonomous provinces or at least 30,000 voters. TheOmbudsman and the Governor of theNational Bank of Serbia also have the right to propose laws falling within their competence. Upon the request of the majority of all deputies or at least 100,000 voters, the National Assembly may call areferendum on issues falling within its competence.[2]
ThePresident of the Republic may dissolve the National Assembly, upon an elaborated proposal of the Government. The Government may not propose dissolution of the assembly if a proposal has been submitted to dismiss the Government. The National Assembly is also dissolved if it fails to elect the Government within 90 days from the day of its constitution. The National Assembly may not be dissolved during the state of war and state of emergency. The National Assembly, which has been dissolved, only performs current or urgent tasks. In case of declaration of the state of war or state of emergency, its full competence is re-established and lasts until the end of the state of war, that is, emergency.[2]
Covering about 13,400 m2 (144,000 sq ft), building is designed inneo-baroque and includes some 100 offices, two chambers, four conference rooms, and a centralvestibule topped by a dome. The 165-square-metre (1,780 sq ft) library, on the first floor, contains over 60,000 books.
^John V. A. Fine,The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest, The University of Michigan Press, 2009. (p. 41-42)
^Law on the Election of Members of the Parliament (2000, as amended 2011) (Articles 88 & 92) made available viaLegislationOnlineArchived 7 April 2019 at theWayback Machine, accessed 28 February 2017.
Rastović, A.; Roter Blagojević, M.; Borozan, I. (2022).Народна скупштина: огледало воље народа Србије [National Assembly: Mirroring the Will of Serbian People]. Novi Sad-Belgrade.ISBN978-86-81648-50-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
National Assembly of Serbia (December 2010)."ИНФОРМАТОР О РАДУ"(PDF). National Assembly of Serbia.(This text is in the public domain as the official material of the Republic of Serbia state body or a body performing public functions, under the terms of Article 6, Paragraph 2 of Serbian copyright law)
Popović, Radomir J. (2020)."Narodna skupština 1846. godine".Od prestonice do industrijskog centra Srbije –Kragujevac sredinom 19. veka. Kragujevac: Centar za naučnoistraživački rad Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti; Univerzitet u Kragujevcu:81–95.ISBN978-86-81037-64-5.
Orlović, Slaviša (2012). "Ustavni, politički i institucionalni okvir Narodne skupštine Republike Srbije".Demokratske performanse parlamenata Srbije, Bosne i Hercegovine i Crne Gore. Sarajevo Open Centre:15–42.
Spasojević, Dušan (2012). "Kontrolna funkcija Narodne skupštine Republike Srbije".Demokratske performanse parlamenata Srbije, Bosne i Hercegovine i Crne Gore. Sarajevo Open Centre:135–146.
Pavlović, M. (2010),Narodna skupština u ustavima Kneževine i Kraljevine Srbije, Dva veka srpske ustavnosti, Belgrade: SANU