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Nitijela

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromLegislature of the Marshall Islands)
National legislature
Nitijela

Nitijeļā
46th Constitutional Regular Session
Type
Type
History
Founded1979[1]
Leadership
Speaker
Brenson Wase
since 3 January 2024
Vice Speaker
Issac Zacharias
since 3 January 2024
Structure
Seats33 members
Political groups
 Independent (33)
Length of term
4 years
Elections
Single andmulti-seatconstituencies
Last election
20 November 2023
Next election
15 November 2027
Meeting place
Nitijeļā, Marshall Islands Parliament,Majuro
Website
rmiparliament.org/cms/
Legislative
Judiciary
Elections
Administrative divisions

TheNitijela (Marshallese:Nitijeļā[nʲidˠiːzʲɛlˠæ])[2] is the legislature of theMarshall Islands. It has 33 members, elected for a four-year term in nineteen single-seat and five multi-seatconstituencies. The last election was 20 November 2023. Elections in the Marshall Islands are officiallynonpartisan, but most members of theNitijeļā are affiliated with one of the four activepolitical parties in the Marshall Islands:Aelon Kein Ad (AKA),Kien Eo Am [wikidata] (KEA),United People's Party (UPP), andUnited Democratic Party (UDP).

History

[edit]

A bicameral Marshall Islands Congress was established in July 1950. The two chambers were theHouse of Iroij and the House of Assembly.[3]Kabua Kabua was the president of the House of Iroij in 1953.Atlan Anien was the president of the House of Assembly in 1953.[3]

The Congress was reformulated as unicameral in 1958.[4][5] Members were elected for a 4-year term. The congress was chaired byAtlan Anien in 1959,Amata Kabua in 1962, andDwight Heine in 1963 and 1964.[4]

The legislature,Nitijeļā, was established in its current form in 1979 by theConstitution of the Marshall Islands.[6]

2025 parliament building fire

[edit]

On 26 August 2025, the parliament building, library and archives were destroyed in a fire.[7] Half of the building was burned down, while the other half remains in an unusable state.[8] The fire started around midnight or shortly after on the morning of the 26th, and the building was fully covered in flames by the time a fire truck arrived. A Marshallese government spokesperson stated that early signs indicate that the fire could have originated from acontainer trailer stationed next to the building.[9] According to former health secretary Jack Niedenthal, local firefighters lack resources and were not equipped to handle large fires.[9]RNZ reported that the Marshallese fire department is "pretty nonexistent" besides an airport firefighter team, which was unable to arrive at the building "for over an hour".[10]

As the fire occurred while the legislature is in session, the legislature was left without a place to meet.[11] In the following days, it was announced that the legislature would resume session the next week, temporarily using the International Conference Center building inMajuro.[12] Many files were notbacked up and, according to RNZ, "it would take people weeks to figure out what they had lost and what they could access."[10] It was confirmed that documents of historical significance, such as the history of the firstconstitutional convention of the Marshall Islands, as well as original copies of early laws passed by the Nitijeļā, were destroyed.[12]

In response to the fire,Taiwan stated that it will "provide necessary assistance in a timely manner."[13] Marshallese presidentHilda Heine announced that her cabinet approved a plan to begin construction on a new parliament building by the end of 2025, taking priority over previous plans to construct a new capital facility.[14]Amata Coleman Radewagen, theUS House of Representatives delegate forAmerican Samoa, promised to lobby the US government to provide assistance.[12]

Speakers

[edit]

The salary of the speaker is set to US$35,000 annually.[15]

NamePeriodNotes
Atlan Anien1979–1988[16]
Kessai Note1988–1999[16]
Litokwa TomeingJanuary 10, 2000 – 2007[16]
Jurelang ZedkaiaJanuary 7, 2008 – October 26, 2009[16]
Alvin JacklickNovember 2, 2009 – January 7, 2012[16]
Donald CapelleJanuary 7, 2012 – January 4, 2016[16]
Kenneth KediJanuary 4, 2016 – January 3, 2024[16]
Brenson WaseJanuary 3, 2024 – Incumbent[16]

Members ofNitijeļā

[edit]

The twenty-four electoral districts into which the country is divided correspond to the inhabited islands andatolls. There are four political parties in the Marshall Islands:Aelon Kein Ad (AKA),Kien Eo Am (KEA),United People's Party (UPP), andUnited Democratic Party (UDP). Control is shared by the AKA and the KEA.

Members of theNitijeļā as of 2020[17]
ConstituencyMemberTitleParty
Ailinglaplap AtollAlfred Alfred Jr.Minister of Resources and DevelopmentKEA
Christopher LoeakSenator, former president (2012–2015)AKA
Ailuk AtollMaynard AlfredSenatorKEA
Arno AtollJejwarick AntonVice SpeakerKEA
Mike HalfertyMinister of Transportation and CommunicationInd.
Aur AtollHilda HeineSenator, former president (2016–2020)Ind.
Ebon AtollJohn SilkMinister of Foreign AffairsKEA
Enewetak AtollJack AdingSenatorAKA
Jabat IslandKessai NoteSenator, former president (2000–2007)UDP
Jaluit AtollDaisy Alik-MomotaroSenatorInd.
Casten NemraSenator, former president (2016)Ind.
Kili IslandEldon NoteSenatorUDP
Kwajalein AtollAlvin JacklickSenatorKEA
Michael KabuaSenatorAKA
David PaulMinister in Assistance to the PresidentKEA
Lae AtollThomas HeineMinister of JusticeAKA
Lib IslandJoe BejangSenatorAKA
Likiep AtollLeander Leander Jr.SenatorAKA
Majuro AtollKalani KanekoMinister of HealthKEA
David KramerSenatorKEA
Tony MullerMinister of Public WorksKEA
Sherwood TibonSenatorKEA
Brenson WaseMinister of FinanceKEA
Maloelap AtollBruce BilimonSenatorAKA
Mejit IslandDennis MomotaroSenatorUPP
Mili AtollWilbur HeineMinister of EducationAKA
Namdrik AtollWisely ZackhrasSenatorUDP
Namu AtollTony AiseiaSenatorAKA
Rongelap AtollKenneth KediSpeakerKEA
Ujae AtollAtbi RiklonSenatorAKA
Utirik AtollAmenta MatthewMinister of Internal AffairsKEA
Wotho AtollDavid KabuaPresidentAKA
Wotje AtollLitokwa TomeingSenator, former PresidentUPP

Committees

[edit]

TheNitijeļā has 7 permanent standing committees with oversight authority and legislative authority. All committees have 9 members.[18]

Nitijeļā Permanent Standing Committees[18]
CommitteeChairDuties
AppropriationCasten Nemraconsiders and reports on all legislation relating to public expenditure or financial administration, both federal and local, including budget estimates and supplementary estimates referred to it
Public AccountsBruce Bilimonconsiders the public funds and account of the Marshall Islands, in conjunction with the report of the Auditor-General on them; reports to theNitijeļā any excess/unauthorized expenditures and the reasoning for it; proposes any legislation it deems necessary to ensure public funds are properly and efficiently spent and accounted for; reports to theNitijeļā on any audit of public accounts
Health, Education, and Social AffairsAlvin Jacklickconsiders all legislation relating to the education, health, condition of labor, and well-being of the people of the Marshall Islands
Ways and MeansSherwood Tibonconsiders all legislation relating to the revenue of the federal and local governments, including matters relating to the administration of revenue laws
Judiciary and Governmental RelationsDaisy Alik-Momotaro
Resources and DevelopmentDavid Kramer
Foreign Affairs and TradeMaynard Alfred

Staff

[edit]

TheNitijeļā is supported by various staff.

Clerk of theNitijeļā

[edit]

The clerk is the administrative head of the legislature, with authority to approve related matters. The clerk prepares theNitijeļā's business and serves as the legislature's secretary, keeping minutes and publishing them.[19]

The current clerk is Morean Watak, and Carl Alik is her assistant clerk.[19]

Legislative Counsel

[edit]

The Office of the Legislative Counsel was established in 1981. The office provides legal advice to MPs and the speaker, as well as providing legislative drafting services. The legislative counsel also serves as the Commissioner of the Marshall Islands Revised Code if the Cabinet has not appointed a commissioner.[20]

The current legislative counsel is Joe Lomae.[20]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"History of the Nitijela".rmiparliament.org. Archived fromthe original on 2019-02-02. Retrieved2019-02-02.
  2. ^"Marshallese-English Dictionary".www.trussel2.com.Archived from the original on 2019-10-29. Retrieved2019-12-15.
  3. ^ab"Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands". Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs. August 2, 1955 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ab"Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands". Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs. January 1, 1964.Archived from the original on October 1, 2024. RetrievedOctober 2, 2020 – via Google Books.
  5. ^"Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands". Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Office of United Nations Political Affairs. 1971 – via Google Books.
  6. ^"Constitution of the Marshall Islands".wipolex.wipo.int.Archived from the original on 2021-08-29. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  7. ^"Marshall Islands parliament burns down in overnight fire".The Guardian. Reuters. 2025-08-26.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  8. ^"Marshall Islands Parliament burns down in overnight fire".The Straits Times. 2025-08-26.ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  9. ^ab"Marshall Islands 'in shock' after devastating fire destroys parliament building".ABC News.Archived from the original on 2025-08-26. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  10. ^ab"'All destroyed': Fire engulfs Marshall Islands parliament complex".Radio New Zealand.Archived from the original on 26 August 2025. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  11. ^"'All destroyed': Fire engulfs Marshall Islands parliament complex".RNZ. 2025-08-26.Archived from the original on 2025-08-26. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  12. ^abcJohnson, Giff (2025-08-28)."Marshall Islands fire: US support proposed for new parliament building".RNZ. RNZ Pacific.Archived from the original on 2025-08-28. Retrieved2025-08-28.
  13. ^"Marshall Islands parliament burns down in overnight fire".Reuters. 2025-08-26. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  14. ^"Marshall Islands to fast-track new parliament after devastating fire".RNZ. 2025-08-27. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  15. ^Nitijela."NITIJELA MEMBERS COMPENSATION ACT 1980"(PDF).rmiparliament.org. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2022-10-02. Retrieved2020-01-12.
  16. ^abcdefgh"Republic of the Marshall Islands".rmiparliament.org. Archived fromthe original on 2019-01-09. Retrieved2019-01-08.
  17. ^"Members".rmiparliament.org.Archived from the original on 2019-11-03. Retrieved2019-09-20.
  18. ^ab"Permanent Standing Committees".rmiparliament.org.Archived from the original on 2019-02-28. Retrieved2019-02-27.
  19. ^ab"Office of the Clerk".rmiparliament.org. Archived fromthe original on 2019-02-28. Retrieved2019-02-27.
  20. ^ab"Office of the Legislative Counsel".rmiparliament.org. Archived fromthe original on 2019-02-28. Retrieved2019-02-27.

External links

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