1961 Constitution Under its previous , Venezuela had a
bicameral legislature, known as the Congress
(Congreso). This Congress was composed of a
Senate (Senado) and a
Chamber of Deputies (Cámara de Diputados). The Senate was made up of two senators per
state, two for the
Federal District, and a number of
ex officio senators intended to represent the nation's minorities. In addition, former presidents (those elected democratically or their replacements legally appointed to serve at least half a presidential term) were awarded
lifetime senate seats. Senators were required to be Venezuelan-born citizens and over the age of 30. The members of the Chamber of Deputies were elected by direct universal suffrage, with each state returning at least two. Deputies had to be at least 21 years old. The Senate and the Chamber of Deputies were each led by a President, and both performed their functions with the help of a Directorial Board. The President of Senate of Venezuela held the additional title of "President of the Congress", and was the constitutional successor of the
President of Venezuela in case of a vacancy. This succession took place in 1993, when
Octavio Lepage succeeded
Carlos Andrés Pérez.
1999 Constitution Hugo Chávez was first elected as
President of Venezuela in December 1998 on a platform calling for a
constituent assembly to be convened to draft a new
constitution for the country. Chávez's argument was that the existing political system, under the earlier 1961 Constitution, had become isolated from the people. In the
Constituent Assembly elections held on 25 July 1999, all but six seats were given to candidates associated with the Chávez movement. The
Constituent National Assembly (ANC), consisting of 131 elected individuals, convened in August 1999 to begin rewriting the constitution. The ANC's proposed constitution was later approved in a
referendum on 15 December 1999, with voter turnout at 44%, and came into effect on 20 December.
2017 constitutional crisis On 29 March 2017, the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ), led by
Maikel Moreno, ruled that the opposition-controlled National Assembly was in contempt and transferred all legislative powers to the court itself. The TSJ had previously declared the Assembly in contempt in 2016 after it swore in several legislators whose elections had been annulled. The 2017 ruling stated that this “situation of contempt” prevented the Assembly from exercising its constitutional authority. As a result, legislative powers shifted from the Assembly, which had been under opposition control since 5 January 2016, to the pro-government Supreme Court. On 4 August 2017, Venezuela convened a new
Constituent National Assembly after
a special election which was boycotted by the
Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) and other opposition parties. On 18 August, the Constituent Assembly summoned members of the National Assembly to a ceremony intended to acknowledge its claimed legal authority, though no such authority formally existed. Opposition lawmakers boycotted the event, after which the Constituent Assembly assumed all legislative powers from the National Assembly. It justified the move by accusing the Assembly of failing to curb what it described as “opposition violence” during the
2017 Venezuelan protests. The legality of this decision has been widely disputed and condemned by several foreign governments and international organizations.
2020 contested leadership election The
2020 Delegated Committee election on 5 January 2020 was marked by controversy, resulting in two competing claims to the presidency: one by deputy
Luis Parra and the other by incumbent
Juan Guaidó. Parra, a former member of
Justice First expelled in December 2019 over corruption allegations he denied, declared himself president inside the legislature with an alleged 87 votes. His claim was endorsed by the
Second Maduro Government. The opposition rejected the result, arguing that no quorum was present and no votes had been formally counted. On 7 January, Guaidó forced his way into the legislative chamber through police barricades, where he was sworn in as president of the Assembly despite power cuts inside the building. Parra, meanwhile, continued to assert his own claim to the presidency. ==Membership==