Everything about Senate Of Bermuda totally explained
The
Senate is one of two parts of the
Parliament of Bermuda, the other being the
House of Assembly. Both are overseen by the
Governor. The Senate is the Upper House of the Parliament, and serves as a House of Review.
The Senate consists of eleven members appointed by the
Governor. Five Senators are appointed on the advice of the
Premier. Three Senators are appointed on the advice of the
Leader of the Opposition in the House of Assembly. The final three Senators are appointed at the discretion of the Governor.
The Senate serves as a road-block to constitutional changes, the constitution requires a 2/3rds Super-Majority. Thus, in order for an amendment to pass, it needs the support of the Government and the Opposition/Appointees
Of the three appointed by the Governor, the Senate elects one to serve as the President, and another to serve as the Deputy President.
Bermuda's Parliament was created in 1620, and originally had one house, the House of Assembly. Political parties were not legal, and the role now performed by the Senate was originally performed by an appointed council, called the Governor's Council, or the
Privy Council. This council also performed the role that today belongs to the Cabinet (the Cabinet is composed of Ministers appointed from elected Members of Parliament from the House of Assembly). Historically, the Council, composed of members of Bermuda's wealthy merchant class, had been the true centre of power, rather than the elected House of Assembly, or the Governor despatched from overseas. During periods when the colony was without a Governor, the President of the Council might find himself Acting Governor, also. The balance of power began to shift away from the Council in the 19th Century, when Bermuda assumed a new importance in Imperial security, and when the Governor became also the Commander in Chief of the
naval establishment and military garrison.
In the 1960s, largely as a result of the civil rights movement, a constitution was introduced which made a number of changes to Bermuda's parliamentary system, making it more like the Westminster system. Political parties were legalised, and the system of a majority Government, from which a Premier was appointed and the
Cabinet Ministers were drawn, and a minority opposition was adopted. The Senate was created as an upper house, akin to the
House of Lords, in
London, although its members were appointed, rather than being
hereditary,
noble peers. The system of
suffrage, by which the members of the lower house was elected, and which had historically been limited to male landowners, was finally extended to all adults, as it had been in Britain forty years earlier.
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