The
previous House of Representatives, elected in May 1999, was dissolved by
King Gyanendra on advice of
Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba in May 2002 in order to hold new elections. Elections could not take place due to the ongoing
civil war which eventually led King Gyanendra to stage a royal
coup in February 2005 after dismissing four Prime Ministers. Following the
democracy movement of 2006, the King reinstated the earlier legislature. On 15 January 2007, the House of Representatives was replaced by an
Interim Legislature. The Interim Legislature consisted both of members appointed by an agreement between the
Seven Party Alliance and the
Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). The Interim Legislature was followed by the
first Constituent Assembly whose task was to form a new constitution. The failure of the assembly to write a constitution within the stipulated time led to the formation of the
second Constituent Assembly which approved the
Constitution of Nepal on 20 September 2015. After the promulgation of constitution, the second Constituent Assembly was converted into a unitary Legislature Parliament. The constitution set the tenure of the Legislature Parliament until 21 January 2018 or the date of filing of nomination for the
Pratinidhi Sabha, whichever is earlier. Per this provision, the tenure of the Legislature Parliament ended on 14 October 2017. A five-member Constituency Delineation Commission was formed under the chairmanship of former Supreme Court Justice Kamal Narayan Das to redraw the constituency boundaries to 165, a reduction from the 240 used in the
2013 elections. It submitted its report to the government on 30 August 2017. The boundaries set by this commission will remain unchanged for the next 20 years as per Article 286 (12). ==Electoral system==