Overview
The National Assembly of Hikarima stands as the supreme legislative authority of the nation, embodying the democratic principles of representation while maintaining the constitutional values of wisdom, beauty, and purity. Operating under a bicameral system, the Assembly ensures balanced governance through careful deliberation, comprehensive representation, and thoughtful policy-making.
Senate of Hikarima (Upper House)
The Senate ensures equal regional representation across all cities, serving as the reviewing chamber for legislation and the confirming body for key executive appointments.
| Composition | 2 Senators per city (equal regional representation) |
| Current Membership | 56 Senators |
| Term Length | 6 years โ staggered (1 senator per city elected every 3 years) |
| Electoral System | Direct election by city-wide vote |
| Presiding Officer | Senate President (elected by Senate membership, 3-year term) |
| Minimum Age | 30 years |
| Residency Requirement | 7 years in representing city |
Exclusive Senate Powers
- Confirmation of Prime Minister's cabinet appointments
- Ratification of international treaties
- Trial of impeachment cases initiated by the People's Legislator
- Approval of judicial appointments
- Review of executive emergency declarations
People's Legislator (Lower House)
The People's Legislator serves as the primary chamber for lawmaking, budget origination, and direct citizen representation, with eight representatives per city ensuring population-based democracy.
| Composition | 8 Representatives per city |
| Current Membership | 224 Representatives |
| Term Length | 3 years โ simultaneous general elections |
| Electoral System | Proportional representation within each city |
| Presiding Officer | Chief Representative (elected by chamber membership) |
| Minimum Age | 25 years |
| Residency Requirement | 5 years in representing city |
Exclusive People's Legislator Powers
- Initiation of all revenue and taxation bills
- Impeachment proceedings against high officials
- Primary authority over domestic policy legislation
- Direct representation of citizen concerns
Ideological Blocs
Rather than formal political parties, Hikarima's legislature operates through dynamic ideological blocs that form around policy priorities and philosophical alignments, providing organizational structure while maintaining flexibility and independence.
๐ฆ The Progressive Coalition
Social advancement, economic equality, and comprehensive welfare systems
Healthcare, labor rights, environmental sustainability, social justice, and technology integration in public services.
๐จ The Economic Development Alliance
Market-driven growth, business innovation, and economic competitiveness
Business development incentives, international trade expansion, infrastructure modernization, and regulatory streamlining.
๐ฅ The National Strength Caucus
Strong defense, national security, and institutional stability
Military modernization, national security infrastructure, law enforcement, border security, and veterans affairs.
๐ฉ The Governance Reform Movement
Transparent government, democratic accountability, and institutional reform
Anti-corruption measures, government transparency, electoral system improvements, and civil rights protections.
๐ซ The Cultural Heritage Bloc
Traditional values, cultural preservation, and national identity
Cultural heritage protection, arts and education funding, traditional industries support, and community values.
๐ต The Innovation and Future Caucus
Technological advancement, scientific research, and future-oriented policies
Scientific research funding, technology infrastructure, space programs, digital economy, and future-ready education.
๐ฃ The Regional Autonomy Alliance
Decentralized governance, local authority, and city-level empowerment
Increased local government authority, regional development programs, city-specific policy flexibility.
โฌ Independent Legislators
Complete legislative independence โ unaffiliated with any bloc
Often serve as crucial swing votes, bringing specialized expertise and non-partisan viewpoints to legislative debates.
Committee System
Senate Committees
| Committee | Jurisdiction |
|---|---|
| Foreign Relations and Defense | International treaties, diplomacy, military affairs, defense budget |
| Constitutional and Judicial Affairs | Constitutional interpretation, judicial appointments, legal system oversight |
| Economic Policy and Trade | International trade agreements, economic development, financial regulation |
| Regional Development and Infrastructure | Inter-city coordination, major infrastructure, regional economic development |
People's Legislator Committees
| Committee | Jurisdiction |
|---|---|
| Domestic Affairs and Social Policy | Healthcare, welfare, education, social services |
| Budget and Taxation | Government spending, tax policy, fiscal responsibility |
| Technology and Innovation | Scientific research, technology policy, digital infrastructure |
| Environmental and Sustainability | Environmental protection, climate policy, sustainable development |
| Labor and Economic Affairs | Employment regulations, worker rights, domestic economic policy |
Legislative Process
Committee Review (30โ90 days)
Detailed bill analysis, expert witness testimony, public hearings, amendment development, and committee markup sessions.
Floor Consideration
General debate period (minimum 48 hours), amendment proposals and voting, then final passage vote (simple majority required) in the house of origin. The second house then conducts independent committee review and floor debate.
Conference Resolution (if needed)
If the two houses pass different versions, a joint conference committee is formed to develop a compromise version, which both houses then vote on.
Executive Review (14 days)
The President may sign into law, veto with explanation, or allow the bill to become law without signature.
Veto Override
Two-thirds majority required in both houses within 30 days of the veto.
Oversight & Accountability
The National Assembly exercises broad oversight authority over the executive branch through subpoena powers, government agency audits, quarterly executive reports, annual agency assessments, and public disclosure requirements. The Legislative Ethics Committee maintains bipartisan oversight of legislative conduct.

