Chapter Two: Some Common Features among federations


Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers



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Common features among fed second chamber

Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers

  • What is common to all is the fact that the upper chamber is considered an important component of the federal law-making process
  • The 1995 Ethiopian Constitution stands in sharp contrast in this regard
  • It fulfils the minimum requirement of having a second chamber but with a totally different function.

Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers

  • Although the Constitution guarantees the various nationalities ‘equitable representation’ in the federal government, close observation of Articles 39(3) and 62 reveals that the right to equitable representation in federal government only ensures the various nationalities in the federal executive, in the mostly non-legislative House of the second chamber and perhaps in other federal agents, but not in the federal legislature.

Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers

  • Even though Article 53 states that ‘there shall be two federal houses, namely the House of Peoples Representatives [HPR] and the House of Federation [HoF]’ in the sense of having two chambers, the legislative power of the latter is very much contested.
  • The only provisions where one may by stretch of imagination trace legislative functions are Articles 99, 62(7) and 105.
  • Under the former, the HoF has concurrent power with the HoPR in the determination of residual powers over taxation.
  • In essence this provision refers to reserve powers regarding unspecified future tax bases

Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers

  • Article 62(7) refers to the ‘division of revenues derived from joint Federal and State tax sources and the subsidies that the Federal Government may provide to the states’
  • In both cases, it appears that there is a role to be played by the HoF, but it is far from clear whether this role is legislative or otherwise

Chapter Three Federations and Second Chambers

  • A less frequent but important power of the HOF is the role it plays in the amendment of the Constitution.
  • Except in these cases, which one can hardly consider to be legislative functions, at least not within the list of law-making functions entrusted to HPR under Article 55(2), the HPR remains the sole and highest law-making authority of the federal government

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