Honduras Legislative
National Palace, seat of the National Congress
Courtesy James A. Morris
The legislative branch consists of the unicameral
National
Congress elected for a four-year term of office at the
same time as
the president. When the country returned to civilian
democratic
rule in 1982, the National Congress had a membership of
eighty-two
deputies. This number was increased to 134 deputies for
the 1985
national elections and then reduced to 128 for the 1989
national
elections--it remained 128 for the 1993 national
elections. The
constitution, as amended in 1988, establishes a fixed
number of 128
principal deputies and the same number of alternate
deputies. If
the principal deputy cannot complete his or her term, the
National
Congress may call the alternate deputy to serve the
remainder of
the term.
The National Congress conducts regular annual sessions
beginning
on January 25 and adjourning on October 31. These
sessions,
however, may be extended. In addition, special sessions
may be
called at the request of the executive branch through the
Permanent
Committee of Congress, provided that a simple majority of
deputies
agrees. A simple majority of the total number of principal
deputies
also constitutes a quorum for the installation of the
National
Congress and the holding of meetings. The Permanent
Committee of
Congress is a body of nine deputies and their alternates,
appointed
before the end of regular sessions, that remains on duty
during the
adjournment of the National Congress. The National
Congress is
headed by a directorate that is elected by a majority of
deputies,
which is headed by a president (who also presides over the
Permanent Committee of Congress when the National Congress
is not
in session) and includes at least two vice presidents and
two
ministers.
In fulfilling its responsibilities, the National
Congress has
numerous commissions or committees for the study of issues
that
come before the legislature. In addition to committees
that cover
legislation (first, second, and third debate), protocol,
and the
budget, many other committees parallel the ministries of
the
executive branch, including government and justice,
foreign
affairs, economic affairs and trade, finance and public
credit,
national defense and security, public health, public
education,
communications and public works, labor and social welfare,
natural
resources, and culture and tourism. According to the
internal
regulations of the National Congress, between three and
seven
deputies sit on each committee. In addition, nonstanding
or
extraordinary committees may cover other issues, and
special
committees may be established to investigate matters of
national
interest. Because of the executive-driven nature of the
legislative
process, the committees are somewhat underutilized and
play only a
minor role in the legislative process or congressional
decision
making. Aggravating this underutilization is the fact that
no staff
members are assigned to the committees, so that necessary
studies
or reports for the committees must be are solicited from
outside of
the National Congress.
In addition to its legislative activities, the National
Congress
also has other extensive powers, particularly regarding
other
branches of the government and other institutions of the
Honduran
state. The National Congress is charged with electing
numerous
government officials: the nine principal justices and
seven
alternates of the Supreme Court of Justice, including its
president; the commander in chief of the armed forces; the
comptroller general; the attorney general; and the
director of
administrative probity. In practice, however, the National
Congress
generally rubberstamps the choices of the president, or,
in the
case of the commander in chief of the armed forces, of the
military. The National Congress may declare that there are
grounds
for impeachment of certain high-ranking government
officials,
including the president and presidential designates,
Supreme Court
justices, cabinet ministers and deputy secretaries, and
the
commander in chief of the armed forces.
In its oversight role, the National Congress may
approve or
disapprove the administrative conduct of the other two
branches of
government, the TNE, the comptroller general, the attorney
general,
and the decentralized institutions. The National Congress
may also
question the cabinet secretaries and other officials of
the
government, decentralized institutions, and other entities
concerning matters related to public administration.
With regard to the military and national security, as
noted
above, the National Congress elects the commander in chief
of the
armed forces from a list of three proposed by the
Consuffaa. The
National Congress may fix the permanent number of members
of the
armed forces and confer all ranks from major to major
general, at
the joint proposal of the commander in chief of the armed
forces
and the president. It may authorize or refuse the
president's
request for the crossing of foreign troops through
national
territory. It may also authorize the entrance of foreign
military
missions of technical assistance or cooperation in the
country. The
National Congress may declare an executive-branch
restriction or
suspension of individual rights or guarantees in
accordance with
constitutional provisions, or it may modify or disapprove
of the
restriction or suspension enacted by the president.
With regard to foreign policy, the National Congress
has the
power to declare war or make peace at the request of the
president.
The National Congress also may approve or disapprove
international
treaties signed by the executive branch.
Regarding government finances, the National Congress is
charged
with adopting annually (and modifying if desired) the
general
budget of revenue and expenditures based on the executive
branch's
proposal. The National Congress has control over public
revenues
and has power to levy taxes, assessments, and other public
charges.
It approves or disapproves the formal accounts of public
expenditures based on reports submitted by the comptroller
general
and loans and similar agreements related to public credit
entered
into by the executive branch.
The legislative branch has two auxiliary agencies, the
Office of
the Comptroller General and the Directorate of
Administrative
Probity, both of which are functionally and
administratively
independent. The Office of the Comptroller General is
exclusively
responsible for the post-auditing of the public treasury.
It
maintains the administration of public funds and
properties and
audits the accounts of officials and employees who handle
these
funds and properties. It audits the financial operations
of
agencies, entities, and institutions of the government,
including
decentralized institutions. It examines the books kept by
the state
and accounts rendered by the executive branch to the
National
Congress on the operations of the public treasury and
reports to
the National Congress on its findings. The Directorate of
Administrative Probity audits the accounts of public
officials or
employees to prevent their unlawful enrichment.
Some observers maintain that the National Congress
gradually
became a more effective and independent institution in the
decade
after the country returned to civilian rule in 1982.
According to
political scientist Mark Rosenberg, under the presidency
of Suazo
Córdova the institution appeared only to function as a
rubber stamp
for the executive branch, with little interest in
promoting or
creating policy initiatives. Under the Azcona government
(1986-90),
however, the National Congress became more assertive in
its
relations with the executive branch--with a more vigorous
use of
its oversight powers and more active interest in
developing
legislation. This trend continued under the Callejas
presidency. In
1993 a new legislative support body, the Data Processing
and
Legislative Studies Center (Centro de Informática y
Estudios
Legislativas--CIEL), was created with the assistance of
the United
States Agency for International Development (AID) to help
provide
computer and analytical support to the committees and
deputies of
the National Congress.
Other observers stress the executive dominance over the
legislative branch in almost all areas of public policy.
They point
out that the tradition of a strong executive is deeply
embedded in
the national psyche, with the National Congress itself not
willing
or able to take responsibility for its congressional
obligations.
The general public view of the National Congress is that
deputies
use their offices for personal and political gain. As a
result,
most people contact executive branch officials to promote
causes,
a practice that reinforces executive dominance and makes
it
difficult for the congressional leadership to transform
the
National Congress into an equal partner in government.
The nation's electoral law also limits the independence
and
ultimately the effectiveness of the National Congress.
Elections
for the National Congress are held at the same time as
presidential
elections, and voters must use a unitary ballot that
contains a
party's presidential candidate, as well as its list of
congressional candidates for each department. Voters are
not
allowed to split their tickets for national offices;
however, in
November 1993, voters for the first time could spilt their
ticket
for president and mayor. The percentage of votes that a
presidential candidate receives in each department
determines the
number of deputies from each party selected to represent
that
department. In effect, voters are not sure whom they are
electing
to the National Congress. There is no direct
accountability to the
electorate. Instead, deputies respond to party leadership,
and
party loyalty and bloc voting are the norm. The two major
parties
dominate the National Congress, with smaller parties
finding it
difficult to gain representation. In the 1989 national
elections,
the PNH won seventy-one seats in the National Congress,
and the PLH
captured fifty-five seats. The small Pinu won just two
seats, and
the Honduran Christian Democratic Party (Partido Demócrata
Cristiano de Honduras--PDCH) gained no seats. Efforts to
change the
unitary ballot for the presidential and legislative
candidates for
the November 1993 elections were unsuccessful, largely
because the
two dominant parties overcame pressure by the two smaller
parties
for separate ballots.
Data as of December 1993
|