A council was set up by Sultan
Muhammad Shamsuddeen III to draft the
Constitution of the Maldives on 9 March 1931. The council completed and implemented the constitution on 22 December 1932. This constitution was the basis for the formation, of the first ever Majlis of the Maldives. The meetings of this Majlis were held in the "Hakura Ganduvaru". The first president or the speaker of the Majlis was
Al Ameer Mohammed Farid Didi. Maldives was then ruled by a sultan and the advent of the new constitution was seen as a threat to the sultanate. Thus, mobs were instigated against the constitution and it was publicly torn up. Since then the constitution of the Maldives has been revised a number of times. During the era of
First Republic of the Maldives from 1953 to 1954, there was a bicameral legislature which included
Senate of the Maldives. The Republican constitution was abolished in January 1954 and unicameral legislature was restored.
Parliament building construction The present parliamentary building of the People's Majlis was inaugurated on 1 August 1998, with the presence of Pakistan's then-Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif. The building was built with the assistance of the
Pakistani government, who provided a grant of
Rs. 45 million ($4.25 million) for its construction.
Incidents •
2003 Maldives Unrest: In 2003, amid unrest that unfolded after the killing of political prisoner
Hassan Evan Naseem by security personnel at
Maafushi Prison, some rioters threw stones at the Parliament building. •
2012 Maldives Crisis: The opening session of Parliament was halted when protesters blocked
Mohamed Waheed Hassan from entering the building. •
Assassination of Afrasheem Ali: On 2 October 2012, Member of Parliament Afraasheem Ali was fatally stabbed near his home in Malé. The murder of a sitting legislator marked one of the most serious acts of violence against a member of the Majlis. •
2024 Legislative violence over cabinet appointments: In 2024, there were physical altercations between opposition and government parliamentarians over the
cabinet appointments of president Mohamed Muizzu. •
2025 protests and expulsions during Maldives Media and Broadcasting Regulation Act debate: parliamentary proceedings were disrupted during debates on the Maldives Media and Broadcasting Regulation Bill. Opposition MPs protested inside the chamber, and some were forcibly removed. At the same time,
journalists staged protests inside and outside the Majlis building, with reports of arrests and use of force by police. •
2026 removal of government party MP by Supreme Court over debit issue: In 12 April 2026, the Supreme Court removed a sitting ruling member of parliament from office over failure to comply with a court ruling related to a financial dispute. The decision marked one of the first disqualifications affecting members of the 20th Majlis. == Members and elections ==