National Assembly Assemblée nationale | |
|---|---|
| Type | |
| Type | |
| History | |
| Founded | 1960 |
| Seats | 171 members |
| Elections | |
| Proportional representation | |
Last election | 27 December 2020 |
Next election | 2030 |
| Meeting place | |
| The National Assembly Building,Niamey | |
| Website | |
| www | |
National Assembly (dissolved) |
| Judiciary |
|
TheunicameralNational Assembly (French:Assemblée nationale) wasNiger's elected legislative body. The National Assembly proposed laws and was required to approve all legislation.
It was suspended following the2023 Nigerien coup d'état by the military junta.[1] A new legislative bodyTransitional Advisory Council was appointed by the military junta in July 2025 for a period of five years.[2]
Territorial Assembly was established in 1958 in theColony of Niger. It was succeeded by National Assembly upon independence in 1960. It had 60 deputies from a single party, Parti Progressiste Nigérien (PPN-RDA), and had no real decision-making power. The National Assembly was dissolved after the1974 Nigerien coup d'état.[3]
During the course of military rule (1974–1991) a consultative body (theHigh Council of the Republic of Niger) was reformed to become analogous to a National Assembly. This functioned as a caretaker National Assembly during the Constitutional Convention period of theSecond Republic (1991–1993).
Multiparty rule was established in 1993 in theThird Republic, and the new National Assembly had 83 deputies at that time.[3] Following the1996 Nigerien coup d'état the National Assembly was again suspended, and reinstituted in 1997 under theFourth Republic. Again, following the1999 Nigerien coup d'état, the National Assembly was suspended, but this time was reconstituted within the year under theFifth Republic (1999–2009).[4][5][6][7]
On 27 May 2009, the National Assembly wasdissolved byTandja Mamadou after his plan to hold areferendum was rejected by theConstitutional Court. Although the court and the National Assembly had only a non-binding advisory role over Tandja's referendum plan, statements byMNSD-Nassara's coalition partnersCDS-Rahama indicate the MNSDPrime Minister of Niger, as well as the President, would be open to acensure motion in the assembly. According to the 1999constitution, the President is limited to stand for reelection once: Tandja's second five-year term was to end on 22 December 2009.[8] The purpose of the proposed referendum was to scrap the Constitution of the Fifth Republic, creating a new Sixth Republic prior to the November Presidential elections. Constitutionally, the articles dealing with presidential terms (article 36) may not be revised by any method (article 136). According to President Tandja, the people of Niger want him to stay because he has boosted the economy of Niger.[8] The opposition described this act as dictatorship, calling for protests: a continuation of demonstrations which began in December 2008.[9]
The National Assembly was suspended once again following the2023 Nigerien coup d'état. A new legislative bodyTransitional Advisory Council was appointed by the military junta in July 2025 for a period of five years until 2030. This body has 194 members appointed by the junta.[10] The Speaker of the Advisory Council isMamoudou Harouna Djingarey.[11]
Under theConstitution of the Fifth Republic (18 July 1999), the National Assembly has oversight of the executive in voting on legislation, overriding a Presidential veto, voting no confidence in the Prime Minister, and the reserved right of nominating the Prime Minister. As well, the Assembly has recourse to publicly investigate the executive through committee hearings, hearing in plenary sittings, commissions of enquiry, formal parliamentary questions, "Question Time", andinterpellations. There is no formal parliamentaryombudsman oversight of government.[12]
Under apresidential system of government briefly instituted in 2009–2010, the National Assembly had no power over the selection of the Prime Minister and could not hold a vote of no confidence in the government; however, it also could not be dissolved by the President. As part of the constitutional change, the introduction of aSenate was planned, at which point the National Assembly would have become the lower house of a bicameral parliament.[13]
However, all the changes proved abortive, as PresidentMamadou Tandja, who had orchestrated them, was ousted in aFebruary 2010 coup.Mahamadou Issoufou was elected in the2011 election and the National Assembly's powers were restored.
The current National Assembly, formed following elections held on 21 February 2016, has 171 members, up from 113 members in 2003, elected for a five-year term. The multi-seat constituency members are elected using a party-list (Scrutin de liste) proportional representation system. The remaining eight seats are single constituency, elected by a first-past-the-post system.[14] One element of theJudiciary of Niger, the High Court of Justice, is composed of Deputies elected from within the National Assembly.
Member of the National Assembly for theNigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism (PNDS),Ousseini Tinni, was chosen to be thePresident of the National Assembly after the 2016 elections.
The National Assembly sits for two "ordinary" sessions a year, usually the first during March–June and the second from August to October, meeting at the National Assembly Building inNiamey. So-called "extraordinary" sessions, lasting from a few hours to a week, occur two or more times a year.
Since the year 2000, the National Assembly has ratified between 10 and 30 laws, spending plans, and treaties in each ordinary session.[15] The internal functioning of the Assembly is governed by the 1999Constitution of the 5th Republic and by the Law n° 97 – 006/AN of 5 June 1997.[16]
13°30′41″N2°06′52″E / 13.51139°N 2.11444°E /13.51139; 2.11444