Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism

Belgium was established in 1830 as a unitary state with a bicameral parliament, with symmetrical powers for the upper and the lower house. While federalism and bicameralism are often considered a pair, the Belgian system shows an inverse relationship. The Senate gradually turned into a house represe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Popelier Patricia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Studies on Federalism 2018-06-01
Series:Perspectives on Federalism
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/pof.2018.10.issue-2/pof-2018-0024/pof-2018-0024.xml?format=INT
id doaj-03691af6bb1644a79c7d546fc62a864f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-03691af6bb1644a79c7d546fc62a864f2021-03-02T09:33:14ZengCentre for Studies on FederalismPerspectives on Federalism2036-54382018-06-0110221523710.2478/pof-2018-0024pof-2018-0024Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalismPopelier Patricia0Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Antwerp,Antwerpen, BelgiumBelgium was established in 1830 as a unitary state with a bicameral parliament, with symmetrical powers for the upper and the lower house. While federalism and bicameralism are often considered a pair, the Belgian system shows an inverse relationship. The Senate gradually turned into a house representative of the sub-states, but its powers declined inversely proportional to the level of decentralisation of the Belgian state. This paper inquires how the dismantling of the Belgian Senate fits in the increasingly devolutionary nature of the Belgian state structure. First, it nuances the link between bicameralism and federalism: bicameralism is an institutional device for federalism, but not by necessity, and only under specific conditions. The official narrative is that the Belgian Senate was reformed to turn it into a house of the sub-states in line as a federal principle, but in reality the conditions to fulfil this task are not fulfilled. Instead, the paper holds that bicameralism in Belgium is subordinate to the needs of multinational conflict management, and that complying with the federative ideal of an upper house giving voice to the collective needs of the sub-states would stand in the way of the evolution of the Belgian system towards confederalism based on two major linguistic groups.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/pof.2018.10.issue-2/pof-2018-0024/pof-2018-0024.xml?format=INTBicameralismparliamentary systemsfederalismconfederalismmultinationalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Popelier Patricia
spellingShingle Popelier Patricia
Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
Perspectives on Federalism
Bicameralism
parliamentary systems
federalism
confederalism
multinationalism
author_facet Popelier Patricia
author_sort Popelier Patricia
title Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
title_short Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
title_full Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
title_fullStr Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
title_full_unstemmed Bicameralism in Belgium: the dismantlement of the Senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
title_sort bicameralism in belgium: the dismantlement of the senate for the sake of multinational confederalism
publisher Centre for Studies on Federalism
series Perspectives on Federalism
issn 2036-5438
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Belgium was established in 1830 as a unitary state with a bicameral parliament, with symmetrical powers for the upper and the lower house. While federalism and bicameralism are often considered a pair, the Belgian system shows an inverse relationship. The Senate gradually turned into a house representative of the sub-states, but its powers declined inversely proportional to the level of decentralisation of the Belgian state. This paper inquires how the dismantling of the Belgian Senate fits in the increasingly devolutionary nature of the Belgian state structure. First, it nuances the link between bicameralism and federalism: bicameralism is an institutional device for federalism, but not by necessity, and only under specific conditions. The official narrative is that the Belgian Senate was reformed to turn it into a house of the sub-states in line as a federal principle, but in reality the conditions to fulfil this task are not fulfilled. Instead, the paper holds that bicameralism in Belgium is subordinate to the needs of multinational conflict management, and that complying with the federative ideal of an upper house giving voice to the collective needs of the sub-states would stand in the way of the evolution of the Belgian system towards confederalism based on two major linguistic groups.
topic Bicameralism
parliamentary systems
federalism
confederalism
multinationalism
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/pof.2018.10.issue-2/pof-2018-0024/pof-2018-0024.xml?format=INT
work_keys_str_mv AT popelierpatricia bicameralisminbelgiumthedismantlementofthesenateforthesakeofmultinationalconfederalism
_version_ 1724239121060200448