In the
1946 Polish people's referendum the
Senate of Poland had been abolished with the
Sejm remaining the sole legislative body in Poland. Under the 1952 constitution, the
Sejm officially became the "supreme organ of state power" under article 20. The
Sejm of the Polish People's Republic started with 425 members in 1952 (one deputy represented 60,000 citizens). However, as the population grew, the number of deputies increased. By 1960 the constitution was amended, dropping the calculation and stabilizing the
Sejm at 460 deputies. A "proportional" attribute was dropped from the
five-point electoral law previously used. An article in the constitution stated that deputies were responsible to the people and could be recalled by the people, although this article was never used. Legislation was passed by
majority vote. The
Sejm voted on the budget and
national plans as proposed by the executive. The
Sejm deliberated in sessions, which were called by the
Council of State elected by the
Sejm from its members. The
Sejm also chose a Presidium from its members, with the
Marshal of the Sejm always being a member of the
United People's Party. During its first session the
Sejm nominated the
Prime Minister together with other ministers (the
Council of Ministers), and members of the Council of State. Many other government officials were also chosen, including the head of the
Supreme Audit Office (
Najwyższa Izba Kotroli, NIK), members of the
State Tribunal (
Trybunał Stanu) and
Constitutional Tribunal (
Trybunał Konstytucyjny), as well as the
Ombudsman (
Rzecznik Praw Obywatelskich) (the latter three institutions were created in the 1980s). In practice, like its counterparts in other communist regimes, the
Sejm did little more than rubber-stamp decisions already made by the PZPR. ==Executive organ==