Central Election Commission (Latvia) Explained

Central Election Commission
Native Name:Latvian: Centrālā vēlēšanu komisija
Image Alt:Plaque by the CVK office in Riga
Formed: (current form)
Agency Type:Central election commission
Status:Active
Headquarters:Smilšu iela 4,
Riga, Latvia, LV-1050
Chief1 Name:Kristīne Bērziņa
Chief1 Position:chairperson

Central Election Commission (Latvian: Centrālā vēlēšanu komisija, abbreviated CVK) is the commission responsible for the organising and conducting of elections in the Republic of Latvia. It is regulated by Latvian national law.[1] It organises elections to the Saeima, the European Parliament, local councils as well as referendums. The CVK is an independent state-owned institution and consists of nine members serving four year terms: the chairperson plus seven of the members are elected by the Saeima, while the ninth member is chosen among the judges of the Supreme Court of Latvia.[1]

The commission was established in its current form after on 8 December 1992 after Latvian independence from the Soviet Union. It was, however, originally formed on 20 July 1922 for the first Saeima elections later same year. Since March 2019, Kristīne Bērziņa has served as the commission's chairperson.[2] [3]

Commission chairs

The commission has had five chairpersons:

Name Period
1922—1934
Ansis Buševics1940
1993—1997
1997—2019
2019—present

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Par Centrālo vēlēšanu komisiju. likumi.lv. lv. January 31, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20200813203430/https://likumi.lv/ta/id/57703-par-centralo-velesanu-komisiju. August 13, 2020.
  2. Web site: Central Election Commission. Central Election Commission of Latvia. en. January 31, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210131180728/https://www.cvk.lv/en/central-election-commission/central-election-commission. January 31, 2021.
  3. Web site: CVK ilggadējo vadītāju Cimdaru amatā nomaina Bērziņa. Public Broadcasting of Latvia. lv. March 21, 2019. January 31, 2021.