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| Parlement de la Région de Bruxelles-Capitale | |
|---|---|
| Name | Parlement de la Région de Bruxelles-Capitale |
| Established | 1989 |
| Legislature | Brussels Regional Parliament |
| Members | 89 |
| Meeting place | Hôtel de la Région, Bruxelles |
Parlement de la Région de Bruxelles-Capitale is the legislative assembly of the Brussels-Capital Region established by the State Reform of 1988 and first convened after the 1989 elections; it operates within the institutional framework shaped by the Belgian Constitution, the Special Law on Institutional Reforms, and interactions with the Belgian Federal Parliament, the Flemish Parliament, and the Parliament of Wallonia. The assembly sits at the Hôtel de la Région and legislates in areas devolved under the State Reform, interacting institutionally with the College of the Government of the Brussels-Capital Region, the French Community Commission, and the Flemish Community Commission.
From its creation after the 1988 State Reform and the first legislature elected in 1989, the assembly's evolution reflects constitutional changes codified by the Special Law of 1988 and the Special Law of 1989; its development occurred alongside milestones such as the Saint Michael and Saint Gudula negotiations, the Sixth State Reform, and political events involving figures like Wilfried Martens, Guy Verhofstadt, and Charles Michel. The Parliament's institutional history intersects with municipal histories of Brussels, Anderlecht, Ixelles, and Saint-Josse-ten-Noode and with regional planning debates tied to projects like the Grande Île regeneration, the redevelopment of Mont des Arts, and the extension of the Brussels Metro. Landmark legislative episodes have prompted involvement from actors including the European Commission, the Council of the European Union, party leaders from Parti Socialiste (Belgique), Mouvement Réformateur, Christen-Democratisch en Vlaams, and trade unions such as Fédération Générale du Travail de Belgique.
The assembly comprises 89 members elected by proportional representation under the Belgian electoral system in two language groups—72 French-speaking and 17 Dutch-speaking—through lists presented by parties like Ecolo, DéFI, Open Vlaamse Liberalen en Democraten, Socialistische Partij Anders, and Vooruit. Elections coincide with regional and European cycles and are governed by the Electoral Code, influenced by case law from the Cour constitutionnelle and precedents from contests such as the 1999 regional elections and the 2019 regional elections. Voters in the 19 municipalities of the Brussels-Capital Region cast ballots that determine representation, with mechanisms referencing the D'Hondt method and decisions by the Conseil d'État on campaign disputes.
Procedurally, the Parliament organises through standing committees (e.g., Budget, Urban Planning, Mobility, Environment) with chairpersons elected by the assembly and with plenary sessions presided over by a Bureau headed by a President; internal rules derive from the Parliament's Rules of Procedure shaped by precedents from the Belgian Chamber of Representatives and the Senate. Administrative support is provided by the Parliamentary Secretary and services comparable to those at the European Parliament and facilitated by liaison with the Brussels Institute for Statistics and Analysis; legislative drafting follows processes similar to those used in the Walloon Parliament and includes consultations with the Crisis Centre (OCAM) when security matters arise. Transparency instruments such as public registers, question time, and committee hearings mirror practices in the United Nations parliamentary bodies and are subject to oversight by institutions like the Cour des Comptes.
Competences exercised include urban planning legislation affecting sites like Tour & Taxis and Parc du Cinquantenaire, regional transport oversight coordinating with STIB/MIVB, environmental regulation aligning with European Environment Agency directives, and economic development policies interacting with Brussels Airport Company initiatives and Brussels-based international organizations including NATO and agencies of the European Union. Fiscal powers involve regional taxation measures within constraints set by the Belgian State and financial instruments overseen by the Ministry of Finance (Belgium), while social and cultural competencies coordinate with the French Community of Belgium and the Flemish Community. The Parliament also exercises oversight of the Government of the Brussels-Capital Region and appoints members to bodies such as the Brussels Regional Investment Company.
Political groups reflect Belgium's party landscape with formations including Parti Socialiste (Belgique)],] Mouvement Réformateur, Ecolo, Christen-Democratisch en Vlaams, Open VLD, DéFI, Vooruit, and smaller lists or independents; coalition negotiations reference practices from the Belgian federal cabinet formation and have produced majorities shaped by the outcomes of municipal and federal elections. Majority coalitions have varied across legislatures, involving agreement frameworks reminiscent of accords negotiated in the Region of Wallonia and coalition accords comparable to those in the Government of Flanders, with group discipline and leadership influenced by party presidents such as Paul Magnette, François-Xavier de Donnea, and Sophie Wilmès.
The Parliament meets at the Hôtel de la Région in central Brussels, proximate to landmarks like the Grand-Place de Bruxelles, the Palais de Justice de Bruxelles, and the Parc Royal, and uses symbols including the flag of the Brussels-Capital Region and the Iris emblem derived from regional iconography; ceremonial items and protocols are influenced by Belgian state traditions seen at events involving the Monarchie belge and official commemorations at sites like Place Royale. The assembly's chamber design and insignia reflect civic heritage connected to institutions such as the Royal Library of Belgium and cultural partners like the BOZAR Centre for Fine Arts.
Institutional relations are defined by constitutional arrangements linking the assembly with the Belgian Federal Government, the Flemish Government, the Government of the French Community, the Brussels-Capital Government, the Commission communautaire française (COCOF), and the Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie (VGC), and by coordination mechanisms used in intergovernmental conferences such as the Concertation Committee. Cross-level cooperation involves policy interfaces with bodies like STIB/MIVB, Bruxelles-Propreté, and the Brussels-Capital Region Employment Service, and legal arbitration sometimes refers disputes to the Cour constitutionnelle or the Cour de Cassation. Category:Politics of Brussels