The Senate (French Sénat) is the upper house of the Parliament of France.
A Sénat was also the upper house during the French Consulate of 1799-1804.
Senators are elected indirectly by approximately 150,000 local elected officials ("grands électeurs"), including mayors, city councillors, and deputies of the National Assembly. This system introduces a bias in the composition of the Senate, which favors rural areas. As a consequence, while the political majority changes frequently in the National Assembly, the Senate has remained conservative since the foundation of the Fifth Republic, and it is expected that it will remain so in the forthcoming years.
Following from a tradition started by the first French National Assembly during the French revolution, the "left-wing" parties sit to the left as seen from the president's seat, and the "right-wing" parties sit to the right, and the seating thus indicates the political spectrum as represented in the Senate.
According to the French Constitution, the Senate has almost the same powers as the National Assembly. Bills may be submitted by the government ("projets de loi") or by either house of Parliament ("propositions de loi"). Both houses must adopt the law before it can be promulgated.
Because both houses may amend the bill, it may take several readings to reach an agreement between the National Assembly and the Senate. When the Senate and the National Assembly cannot agree on a bill, the government can decide, after a complex procedure called commission mixte paritaire, to give the final decision to the National Assembly, which majority is normally on the government's side. This does not happen frequently: most of the time both houses eventually agree on the bill, or the government decides to withdraw it. However, this power gives the National Assembly a prominent role in the law-making process.
The Senate also participates in controlling the government's action by publishing many reports every year on various topics.
An important power of the Senate relates to the position of its chairman. The French constitution provides that, in case of a vacancy of the presidency of the republic, the chairman of the Senate becomes the interim president until a new one is elected.
National legislatures | National upper houses | History of France | Government of France | Paris VIe arrondissement
Senat (Frankreich) | Senado de Francia | Sénat (France) | 元老院 (フランス) | Senaat (Frankrijk)
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It uses material from the
"French Senate".
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