Muddy Hollows Seats A New Parliament
Slovenian parliament constitutes for a new term today, kicking off a power-transfer process at the end of which Janez Janša will be looking
Slovenian parliament constitutes for a new term today, kicking off a power-transfer process at the end of which Janez Janša will be looking
Ian Borg misled parliament. On 8 November, Borg told parliament the Malta metro launch cost €76,981.76. The unnecessary detail of the €0.76c
Recently, VVIP culture was once again questioned and condemned after videos showcased a politician’s son with traffic police escorts to avoid the
It’s a funny old world. There are crowned midgets addressed as Your Highness. Obscure cardinals are called Your Eminence. There are aristocrats who
Article 42 stipulates that the President is responsible to Parliament for the exercise, performance and discharge of his functions. Any motion needs
A former Conservative minister warned a newly elected Scottish MP which “predatory” men to avoid in parliament. It comes after Tory backbencher
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa extended an invitation to form an all-party government comprising all political parties represented in Parliament to
When Diane Redsky led Canada’s national task force on sex trafficking, she travelled the country hearing stories from Indigenous women and
Author: Shuja Nawaz, Atlantic Council Imran Khan was voted out of office after only three and a half years on 10 April 2022 by a vote of no
Khan is the only Pakistani prime minister to be ousted in a no-confidence motion in Parliament, paving the way for the Pakistan Muslim
Author: Niharika Rustagi, NUS It has been 25 years since the Women’s Reservation Bill — a constitutional amendment proposing that 33 per cent of
“Speaker Anglu Farrugia carried out important work in the last few years, I mention… (long pause) the reform he carried out to bring
Readers unacquainted with Chaucer’s Old English might misinterpret the title to be ‘Parliament of Fools’. They would be completely wrong.
This weekend is Easter, but it was supposed to have happened last weekend if a law from 1928 — that fixed the date of Easter — were to be
In 1716, the UK Parliament voted to extend its duration from three to seven years. Thirty-one MPs protested against the bill that brought about this