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The Moroccan electoral system leads the political parties to seek coalition governments. However, the Prime Minister appointed by the King from the party that achieved a plurality in the parliamentary elections, and four other main cabinet ministers are appointed by the King of Morocco. [1]
Political party Legislature (Election) King (Reign) 1 Mbarek Bekkay مبارك البكاي (1907–1961) [1] 1: 7 December 1955 12 May 1958 Independent: None Mohammed V محمد الخامس (1955–1961) 2: 2 Ahmed Balafrej أحمد بلافريج (1908–1990) • 12 May 1958 16 December 1958 Istiqlal Party: 3 Abdallah Ibrahim عبد ...
Template:Moroccan political parties This page was last edited on 20 May 2019, at 05:46 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...
Following the March 1998 elections, a coalition government headed by opposition socialist Abderrahmane Youssoufi and composed largely of ministers drawn from opposition parties, was formed. Prime Minister Youssoufi's government is the first government drawn primarily from opposition parties in decades, and also represents the first opportunity ...
Morocco has a bicameral legislature whose two chambers are the House of Councillors and the House of Representatives.The House of Representatives has 395 seats, which are elected by proportional representation and consist of two tiers: 305 seats are elected from 92 multi-member local constituencies (of two to six seats) and the remaining 90 are elected from twelve constituencies based on the ...
Elections in Morocco are held on a national level for the legislature. Parliament has two chambers.The Assembly of Representatives of Morocco (Majlis AL-Nuwab/Assemblée des Répresentants) has 325 members elected for a five-year term, 295 elected in multi-seat constituencies and 30 in national lists consisting only of women.
The Justice and Development Party (Arabic: حزب العدالة والتنمية) is a political party in Morocco that advocates for Islamic democracy. It was the ruling party of Morocco from 2011 to 2021 .
At the end of 1955, and after the return from exile of Sultan Mohammed V, November 16, and the victory of nationalists, Morocco adopted in a first step, a non-elected parliament, resulting from consultations with the main political parties to lay the foundations for future elections. The first chamber was chaired by Mehdi Ben Barka.