Senate of Venezuela explained

The Senate of Venezuela was the upper house of Venezuela's legislature under its 1961 constitution. Under the 1999 constitution, the bicameral system was replaced by the unicameral National Assembly of Venezuela. However, since 1999 the former chamber of senators has been used by the National Assembly for solemn meetings and other special functions.

In Venezuela, lifetime Senate seats existed from 1961 to 1999. The former Presidents who held this position were: Rómulo Betancourt (1964-1981), Raúl Leoni (1969-1972), Rafael Caldera (1974-1994, 1999), Carlos Andrés Pérez (1979-1989, 1994-1996), Luis Herrera Campins (1984-1999) and Jaime Lusinchi (1989-1999).

At the Senate's last election in 1998, it had 54 elected members (48 elected two per state plus 6 additional to get a more proportional result) and 3 lifetime senators.

Presidents of the Senate

Primary sources:[1] [2]

PresidentTenureParty
Carlos R. Travieso1958-1959Independent
Raúl Leoni1959-1962Acción Democrática
Luis Beltrán Prieto Figueroa1962-1965Acción Democrática
Luis Augusto Dubuc1965-1968Acción Democrática
Armando Vegas1968-1969COPEI
José Antonio Pérez Díaz1969-1974COPEI
Gonzalo Barrios1974-1979Acción Democrática
Godofredo González1979-1984COPEI
Reinaldo Leandro Mora1984-1989Acción Democrática
Octavio Lepage1989-1990Acción Democrática
David Morales Bello1990-1991Acción Democrática
Pedro París Montesinos1991-1993Acción Democrática
Octavio Lepage1993-1994Acción Democrática
Eduardo Gómez Tamayo[3] 1994-1996Movimiento al Socialismo
Cristóbal Fernández Daló[4] 1996-1998Movimiento al Socialismo
Pedro Pablo Aguilar[5] 1998-1999COPEI
Luis Alfonso Dávila1999Movimiento V República

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 25 Años de legislación democrática. Venezuela. 1983.
  2. Web site: 5 siglos de historia de Venezuela: Desde 1492 hasta 1996 : Guía para estudiantes. Sereno. Herminia Cristina Méndez. January 1997.
  3. Web site: Bulletin of the Inter-parliamentary Union. 1994.
  4. Web site: Bulletin of the Inter-parliamentary Union. 1995.
  5. Web site: Bulletin of the Inter-parliamentary Union. 1998.