(Redirected from Vouli ton Ellinon)
The 'Hellenic Parliament' (; transliterated 'Vouli (also
Boule) ton Ellinon'; literally 'Will of the Greeks', from the
ancient Greek verb βούλομαι, ''boulomai'', ''to will'';
Latin: ''volo'') is the
Parliament of
Greece, located in the Parliament House, overlooking
Syntagma Square in
Athens. It is a
unicameral legislature of 300 members, elected for a four-year term. The current Speaker ("president") of Parliament is Professor 'Anna Benaki-Psarouda', the first woman to hold the post.
History
Although during the
Greek Revolution a number of
National Assemblies had been held, the first national parliament of the independent Greek state was established only in 1843, after the
September 3rd Revolution, which forced
King Otto to grant a
constitution. In 1911, a
revision of the constitution resulted in stronger
human rights, the reinforcement of the Rule of Law and the modernization of institutions, among them the parliament. After seven years of
military dictatorship, on
December 8 1974, a
referendum was conducted to decide about the nature of the form of government. By a majority of 69.18%, the Greeks decided against a
constitutional monarchy and for a
parliamentary republic.
Election and tenure
The Greek Parliament has 300 members, elected for a four-year term by a system of reinforced proportional representation in
48 multi-seat constituencies, 8 single-seat constituencies and a single nationwide list. 288 of the 300 seats are determined by constituency voting, and voters may select the candidate or candidates of their choice by marking their name on the party ballot. The remaining 12 seats are filled from nationwide party lists on a top-down basis and based on the proportion of the total vote each party received. Eligible for deputies are Greek citizens aged 25 or over on the date of the election, who are eligible to vote. With the sole exception of university professors, citizens who are public servants are disqualified from submitting their candidacies, unless they irrevocably resign their office before promulgation.
Members of Parliament are immune from criminal prosecution, arrest or detention while in office. They are also immune from having to provide any information to any authority regarding their legislative functions and deliberations. They are not immune from civil suits. Alleged crimes committed in the member's official capacity (e.g. embezzlement of public monies) may be adjudicated only after Parliament impeaches the member. Government ministers who are not members of Parliament are subject to the same procedure. The impeachment trial is held by an ''ad hoc''
Special Court. Alleged crimes committed in the member's personal capacity (e.g. homicide) may be adjudicated only after Parliament votes to have the member's immunity suspended, at the request of a prosecuting attorney and only in relation to the particular alleged crime. In such cases, the case is adjudicated by a regular court. The Parliament's permission is not necessary if a member is "caught in the act" of committing a crime (e.g. murder).
Organization
The business of parliament is handled by the 'Presidium' (Προεδρείο της Βουλής), which consists of the Speaker, five Deputy Speakers, three Deans and six Secretaries. It is characterised by a tri-partisan composition, meaning that the fourth Deputy Speaker, a dean and a secretary belong to main opposition party, and the fifth Deputy Speaker and a secretary belong to the next largest (by seats) opposition party. A member of the Presidium, who of course must be a parliamentarian, cannot be a member of the
Cabinet or an Under-Secretary. While the Speaker of the Parliament and the five Deputy Speakers are elected at the beginning of each term and for the entire duration of that term, the tenure of the Deans and of the Secretaries lasts for the duration of one regular session of the Parliament for which they were elected.
Legislative Process
The Parliament votes for a Bill (Νομοσχέδιο, ''Nomoskhedio'') to become Law (Νόμος, ''Nomos'') in three voting sessions: firstly in principle, then per article (when amendments may be proposed and either approved or rejected) and then as a whole. A "simple" (50% plus one) majority is sufficient for any such vote to pass. Once the bill is passed, it is sent to the
President of the Republic to promulgate and publish in the
Government Gazette. The countersignature of the appropriate government minister(s) is required, Delegation of legislative power is generally allowed, unless the Constitution provides for a situation where a Law (Nomos) is required. Laws can be found online in the National Gazette but the service works through subscription. Also, hard copies of the legislation can be obtained at the National Gazette office. A private online service, the Nomos database, that again works through subscription, can be used for legislation research. There is no public database or website where one can obtain legislation. It is not published in the Parliament website either.
Constitutional Revision
Parliament has the right to revise or amend the Constitution, except for the articles dealing with the "Form of the State" (i.e. the establishment of the presidential, parliamentary republic) and the articles safeguarding human rights and freedoms, which are unalterable. Revision of the Constitution is initiated by a motion by at least one sixth of MPs, and agreed by a supermajority of three fifths of MPs, expressed twice, in two separate votes at least one month apart. In this case, the business of revision is transferred to the next term of Parliament, i.e. after the following legislative elections. Parliament may then ratify the revision by a 50% plus one majority. If the initial motion for revision has only achieved a 50% plus one majority, then a three fifths supermajority of the new Parliament is required. A Parliament thus endowed by its predecessor with the powers of revising the Constitution is officially named a "Revisional Parliament" and is enumerated separately from "Ordinary" Parliamentary terms. In recent years, the 1974 Parliament was titled "5th Revisional", the 1986 one was the "6th Revisional" and the 2001 one the "7th Revisional Parliament". The 2004-2007 Parliament was the "11th Ordinary Parliament" of the
Third Hellenic Republic, and the 2007 Parliament will be the "8th Revisional Parliament". A minimum of five years must elapse after the successful conclusion of the revision process, before another may be initiated.
Parallel activities
Parliament operates its own
Free-to-air television station, "
Vouli TV", which broadcasts all plenary and committee sessions. When no parliamentary business is conducted, the station broadcasts a selection of films, plays, classical music concerts, opera and ballet performances and historical documentaries.
During summer recess, Parliament operates "Teenager Parliament" (''Vouli ton Efivon''), a series of sessions during which a rotating quota of MPs attends speeches and debates held by high school junior students from Greece, Cyprus, and the
Greek Diaspora. The program carries the twin aims of alerting parliamentarians to the needs and perspectives of younger generations, and to educate teenagers in the practice of proper debating and participation in public life. Parliament also hosts official visits and tours for middle- and high-schools throughout the school year.
Parliament regularly organizes exhibitions and retrospectives on various aspects of public life, mainly dealing with aspects of political and parliamentary history.
Parliament administers the "Parliament Foundation", a research and publishing foundation established to produce printed and electronic media, mainly on archival material, historical and scientific matters pertaining to parliamentary functions and the past political and cultural life of Greece.
The building

Evzones in front of the Unknown Soldier
Parliament was housed in the
Old Parliament House, on
Stadiou Street, from 1843 to 1854 and again from 1875 to 1932.
The current building, designed by
Friedrich von Gärtner and completed in 1843, originally served as a
palace for the
Greek monarchs. After suffering fire damage in 1909, it entered a long period of renovation. Members of the royal family continued to reside there until 1924, when a
referendum abolished the monarchy. The building was then used for many different purposes — functioning as a makeshift
hospital and a
museum, among other things — until November 1929, when the government decided that the building would instead house the Parliament. After more extensive renovations, the Senate convened in the "Old Palace" (Παλαιά Ανάκτορα) on
2 August 1934, followed by the Fifth National Assembly on
1 July 1935. Although the monarchy was restored that same year, the building has housed the Parliament ever since.
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Μνημείο του Αγνώστου Στρατιώτη), guarded by the
Evzones of the Presidential Guard, is located in the formal forecourt of the building. The monument started being constructed in 1929 and was inaugurated on
March 25 1932.
Improvements are ongoing, some of them significant (such as the addition of an 800-vehicle underground parking structure), to ensure that the building can continue to function effectively.
Current composition
'Summary of the 7 March 2004
Greek Parliament election results
|-
!style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=left valign=top rowspan=2 colspan=2|Parties
!style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=left valign=top rowspan=2|Leaders
!colspan="3" cellpadding="10" style="background-color:#E9E9E9"|Votes
!colspan="2" style="background-color:#E9E9E9"|Seats
|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9"
!No.
!%
!align="center"|+− %
!align="center"|No.
!align="center"|+−
|-
|
|align=left|
New Democracy (''Nea Dimokratia'')
|align=left|
Kostas Karamanlis
|align="right"|3,359,058
|align="right"|45.4
|align="center"|+2.7
|align="center"|165
|align="center"|+39
|-
|
|align=left|
Panhellenic Socialist Movement (''Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima'')
|align=left|
George Papandreou
|align="right"|3,002,531
|align="right"|40.5
|align="center"|-3.2
|align="center"|117
|align="center"|−40
|-
|
|align=left|
Communist Party of Greece (''Kommunistiko Komma Elladas'')
|align=left|
Aleka Papariga
|align="right"|436,573
|align="right"|5.9
|align="center"|+0.4
|align="center"|12
|align="center"|+1
|-
|
|align=left|
Coalition of the Radical Left (''Synaspismos tis Rizospastikis Aristeras'')
|align=left|
Alekos Alavanos
|align="right"|241,539
|align="right"|3.3
|align="center"|+0.1
|align="center"|6
|align="center"|0
|-
|
|align=left|Others
|align=left|
|align="right"|365,214
|align="right"|4.9
|align="center"|
|align="center"|0
|align="center"|0
|-
|align=left colspan=8|
★ Source: Greek Interior Ministry website http://www.ypes.gr/ekloges/content/gr/ethnik_fr.htm
|}
See also
★
Vouli Tileorasi
★
Boule (Ancient Greece)
External links
★
Official website of the Hellenic Parliament
★
History of the Hellenic Parliament Building
★
The Parliament Building (Old Palace)