Legislature of Río Negro explained

Legislature of Río Negro
Coa Pic:Escudo de la Provincia del Río Negro.svg
Coa Res:100px
House Type:Unicameral
Members:46 legislators
Term Length:4 years
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1:Alejandro Palmieri
Party1:(JSRN)
Election1:10 December 2019
Leader2 Type:First Vice President
Leader2:Julia Elena Fernández
Party2:(JSRN)
Election2:10 December 2019
Leader3 Type:Second Vice President
Leader3:Humberto Alejandro Marinao
Party3:(FDT)
Election3:10 December 2019
Structure1:Legislatura de la Provincia de Rio Negro 2019.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:Government (28)

Opposition (18)

Voting System1:Parallel voting
Last Election1:7 April 2019
Next Election1:2023

The Legislature of Río Negro Province (Spanish; Castilian: Legislatura de la Provincia de Río Negro) is the unicameral legislative body of Río Negro Province, in Argentina. It convenes in the provincial capital, Viedma.

It comprises 46 legislators, 22 of whom are elected in a single province-wide multi-member district, while the remaining 24 are elected in eight three-member districts that divide the province's territory, called "electoral circuits" (circuitos electorales). Its powers and responsibilities are established in the provincial constitution.

Elections to the legislature take place every four years, when the entirety of its members are renewed. The legislature is presided by the Vice Governor of Río Negro, who is elected alongside the governor every four years.[1]

History

The Legislature was established in 1958, when the National Territory of Río Negro became a province of Argentina. The first legislature convened in the old building of the Teatro Argentino, in Viedma. In 1972, the military governor, Roberto Requeijo, ordered a series of renovations to better accommodate the legislature in the site of the Teatro Argentino.[2]

Electoral districts

Legislators in both the province-wide district and the eight electoral circuits are elected through proportional representation using party-list proportional representation, with D'Hondt system and a 5% electoral threshold. The electoral circuits do not correspond to the province's departments, but are rather divided using municipalities as its main criterion.[3]

The electoral circuits were first introduced ahead of the 1958 provincial elections, originally comprising six districts.[4] The current distribution was established in 2013, when the electoral law was last modified.[3]

Electoral
Circuit
MunicipalitiesMap
Alto Valle Oeste
Alto Valle Centro
Alto Valle Este
Valle Medio
Valle Inferior
Andino
Serrano/Línea Sur
Atlántico

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Río Negro. Observatorio Electoral Argentino CIPPEC. 30 January 2022. es.
  2. Web site: Historia. Legislatura de la Provincia de Río Negro. 30 January 2022. es.
  3. Web site: Elecciones Provinciales 2019. Poder Judicial de Río Negro. 30 January 2022. es.
  4. Camino Vela. Francisco. May 2011. La dinámica política en la Provincia de Río Negro (Argentina) desde mediados del siglo XX: el predominio de la Unión Cívica Radical. PhD. University of Seville. 30 January 2022. es.