Congress of the Mexican Empire

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Congress of the Mexican Empire
4th Congress
Seal of the Congress of Mexico
Type
Type Unicameral
Houses
Leadership
Emperor FroyourFilms
Since May 15, 2022
President MF_Rayado
Since July 1, 2023
Leader of the Opposition LordRiley
Since July 1, 2023
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Structure
Seats 7 representatives
{{{UpperHouse}}}
Political Groups
Congress
Political Groups
Nonpartisan (7)
Elections
Term Limits
{{{UpperHouse}}}
Voting System
Congress
Voting System
Single transferable vote
{{{UpperHouse}}}
last election
Congress
last election
July 1, 2023
{{{UpperHouse}}}
next election
Congress
next election
September 1, 2023
Voting System
Last Election
Next Election

The Congress of the Mexican Empire, often known as the Mexican Congress, is the unicameral legislature of the Mexican Empire. It has existed since the foundation of the Empire, but only became a directly elected legislative body in July 2023 proceeding the adoption of the Mexican Constitution. The Congress consists of 7 members, known as representatives, but can be expanded by the House pursuant to Article I of the constitution. Members are elected at-large by the nation via proportional representation every two months alongside elections for the President. There are no political parties in Mexico, with all Congress members being independent.

Powers and Duties

The Constitution grants the Mexican Congress all legislative powers, with the powers to pass laws, ratify treaties, to declare war, and to impeach federal officers.

Electoral System

The Mexican Empire has no electoral constituencies or districts, with elections corresponding to a single at-large constituency. Elections for Congress are done by a single transferable voting system, and will follow a week-long campaign season with elections on the first of every two months.

History

Pre-Constitutional Legislature

Prior to the Constitution, Mexico had a bicameral legislature with Congress acting as the Lower House and Cabinet acting as the Upper House. Cabinet originally consisted of all State leaders, with Congress consisting of an assortment of various significant mayors and Mexican citizens, appointed by the Emperor.