History
Origins
On 18 August, the day afterFederal Era and Parliamentary Democracy Era
On 27 December 1949, the Dutch government transferred sovereignty to a federal United States of Indonesia (USI), which comprised 16 states and territories, including the Republic of Indonesia. Under the constitution of the USI, the highest chamber of government was the Senate, which comprised 32 members, two from each of the 16 components of the USI. However, one by one, the individual regions and territories of the USI began to dissolve themselves into the Republic, and on 17 August 1950, Indonesia became a unitary state. In discussions starting in May 1950, the Committee for the Preparation of the Constitution of a Unitary State, had was agreed that there would be a unicameral legislature comprising the membership of the lower chamber and Senate from the USI and the KNIP working Committee and the Supreme Advisory Council from the Republic. The provisional constitution also called for the establishment of a Constitutional Assembly to draw up a permanent constitution. This assembly was elected in 1955 but failed to agree on a new constitution, and with the support of the army, on 5 July 1959, Sukarno issuedGuided Democracy Era/Old Order
Formation
In 1960, Sukarno dissolved the lower house, the House of Representatives, after it refused to pass the state budget. He then appointed a Mutual Cooperation House of Representatives (DPR-GR) and reestablished the MPR in the form of a ''Provisional'' People's Consultative Assembly (MPRS). The 610 deputies comprising the membership of the DPR-GR together with 94 appointed regional representatives and 232 appointed representatives of functional sectors, including service personnel of the Armed Forces and the National Police, took their oaths of office on 15 September. It was during this time that the MPRS first passed a series of Resolutions (), a power not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution but hierarchically accepted as legislation directly under the Constitution, but higher than an Act (, passed by the DPR-GR). MPRS and later the MPR would pass Resolutions until 2003, when MPR was definitively stripped of any law-making power.1960 General Session
The MPRS held its first General Session in Bandung,1963 General Session
The second General Session was held in Bandung from 15 May to 22 May 1963. It was at this General Session that Sukarno was elected 'President for Life' through Resolution No. III/MPRS/1963, which was a violation of Article 7 of the1965 General Session
The MPRS held its third General Session in Bandung from 11 to 16 April 1965. This General Session further entrenched Sukarno's ideological approaches in the running of Indonesia. Many of Sukarno's Independence Day speeches were adopted as the guideline for policies in politics and economics. The MPRS also decided on the principals of Guided Democracy, which would involve consultations () and consensus ().Transition to the New Order
1966 General Session
Perhaps the most significant of the MPRS's General Sessions was that in 1966. Meeting in Jakarta from 20 June to 5 July 1966 under a new leadership, and with a membership purged of 180 individuals either pro-Sukarno or linked to organizations implicated in the alleged coup attempt of 30 September 1965, the General Session marked the beginning of the official transfer of power from Sukarno to Suharto. Although the '' de facto'' transfer of power had been made on 11 March by virtue of the '' Supersemar'' document, Suharto wanted to maintain the appearance of legality. During the 1966 session, the MPRS passed 24 resolutions; they included revoking Sukarno's appointment to the life presidency, banning ; explicitly defined in the resolution's corresponding explanatory memorandum to include "the struggle fundaments and the tactics taught by ... Stalin,1967 Special Session
1968 Special Session
The 1968 MPRS Special Session, 21 to 30 March, officially consolidated Suharto's position by appointing him to the presidency. The MPRS commissioned Suharto to continue stabilizing Indonesia's politics and to formulate a Five Year Plan for the economy. The Special Session was assembled when it became obvious that Suharto was not going to be able to hold legislative elections in July 1968 as had been ordered by the 1966 MPRS General Session. During this Special Session, the MPRS also commissioned Suharto to hold elections by 5 July 1971.New Order
1973 General Session
The 1973 General Session, held from 12 to 24 March was of the first MPR to be elected. Its membership was increased to 920. Until 1999 it included members from Golkar, the United Development Party (PPP), the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI), ABRI members ( Indonesian National Armed Forces, which included the police force at the time), as well as regional representatives. For the first time the president was required to deliver an Accountability Speech (similar to1978 General Session
The 1978 General Session, held on 11 to 23 March, passed resolutions that included the integration of East Timor as a province of Indonesia and commissioning Suharto to establish Pancasila as the national ideology via an indoctrination process. The session was noted for the mass walkout of PPP deputies when Suharto referred to religions as "streams of beliefs". During this General Session, Suharto was elected to a third term as president, with Adam Malik, then speaker of the MPR, as his vice president.1983 General Session
The 1983 General Session passed resolutions on the holding of a1988 General Session
The 1988 General Session was marked by a reorganization of the MPR and the return of the sectoral representatives which formed the Groups Faction. Members of this faction, drawn from all walks of life and integrated into the factions of Golkar, PPP, and PDI deputies in the assembly, as well as the regional deputies, were presidential appointees from civil society organizations and representatives of industries. This General Session was also noted for the furor over the nomination of Sudharmono as vice president, which resulted in Brigadier General Ibrahim Saleh interrupting the General Session and PPP's Jailani Naro nominating himself as vice president before he was convinced to withdraw by Suharto - it was the first vice presidential election held with two candidates. The latter was elected to a fifth term as president with Sudharmono elected as vice president.1993 General Session
The 1993 General Session was marked by another reorganization of the MPR, with membership being increased to 1,000 deputies. This General Session was noted for the ABRI's preemptive nomination of Try Sutrisno as vice president. Although displeased, Suharto did not want an open conflict with the military deputies and accepted Try as his vice president. Suharto was elected to a sixth term.1998 General Session
The 1998 General Session was held during the height of the Asian Financial Crisis and the peak of pro-democratic movements in Suharto's regime. In an effort to restore security and stability, the MPR passed a resolution to give special powers to the president to ensure the success and security of development. Suharto was elected to a seventh term, with B.J. Habibie as vice president. To date, this is the New Order's last ever General Session, marked with Suharto's downfall before the Special Session in May, marking the starting the new Reform era.Reform Era
1998 Special Session
The 1998 Special Session (''Sidang Istimewa'') was the first MPR gathering held after Suharto's resignation from the Presidency and fall from power in May 1998. Although it still consisted of politicians who had flourished during Suharto's long regime and the fact that many were holdovers from the recent appointments to the Assembly before the May events, these MPR deputies were keen to distance themselves from Suharto and appeal to the reformist sentiments that were prevalent in Indonesia at the time. During this Special Session, MPR revoked the special powers given to the president in the 1998 General Session and limited the number of terms of the president. The MPR also resolved to hold legislative elections in 1999, ordered a crackdown on corruption, collusion, and nepotism and revoked the resolution which had ordered the indoctrination of '' Pancasila'' to establish it as a national ideology. This Special Session, and Suharto's resignation, marked the downfall of the New Order, which transitioned to the ''Reformasi'' era.1999 General Session
The 1999 General Session was the first MPR with "real" reform credentials. In another reorganization process, the membership was reduced to 700, with 500 deputies of the House of Representatives, 135 Regional Representatives, and 65 Group Representatives. During the General Session, the MPR recognized the referendum in East Timor and set a task force to amend the 1945 constitution. It also stipulated that it would thenceforth hold annual sessions to receive reports from the president, House of Representatives, the Audit Board of Indonesia (BPK), the Supreme Advisory Council (DPA), and the2000 Annual Session
The 2000 Annual Session continued the reform process. The MPR finalized the process of separation of TNI from the National Police that began in 1999 and defined their roles. It also passed resolutions on the consolidation of national unity and recommendations regarding the execution of regional autonomy in the provincial level and below.2001 Special Session
The 2001 Special Session assembled after President Wahid was allegedly involved in a corruption case and after the House of Representatives began claiming that Wahid's leadership had become incompetent. Originally scheduled for August 2001, the Special Session was brought forward to be held on July 2001. It then led to the impeachment of Wahid from the presidency and elected Megawati Sukarnoputri as president and Hamzah Haz as vice-president.2002 Annual Session
The 2002 Annual Session continued the constitutional amendment process, most notably changing the system of presidential elections, abolishing the DPA and requiring that 20 percent of the national budget be allocated for education, It also order the formulation of the Constitutional Court by 17 August 2003. The MPR also created the Regional Representatives Council with its first senators set to be elected in 2004, effectively becoming a bicameral national legislature.2003 Annual Session
The 2003 Annual Session focused on the legal status of the previous resolutions that the MPR and the MPRS had passed, as well as deciding on the composition of a Constitutional Commission. The 2003 Annual Session also outlined the MPR's new status, which would come into effect with the inauguration of the new president in 2004. With the president and vice-president thenceforth elected directly by the people and with the constitutional amendments which the MPR had worked on from 1999 to 2002, the MPR's power was reduced. It would no longer be the highest governing body but would stand on equal terms with the DPR, BPK, the Supreme Court, and the Constitutional Court. In dealing with the president and vice-president, the MPR would be responsible for the inauguration ceremony and, should the occasion call for it, the impeachment of the president or vice-president, or both. The MPR would elect a president and vice-president only if both positions were vacant.2004 Annual Session
During this session, the MPR heard its last accountability speech by a president.Duties and power
Constitutional powers
# Constitutional amendments. As provided by the 1945 Constitution, the MPR is responsible for the amendment or deletion of certain articles and/or provisions of the Constitution. A two-thirds majority vote in a general session of the Assembly can approve any proposed changes to the constitution including scrapping or adding additional articles, sections and provisions, as well as in the introduction of certain amendments. # Presidential and vice-presidential inauguration. The 1945 Constitution empowers the MPR to hold a general inauguration session for the president- and vice president-elect of the Republic within weeks or months after their election. Should the office of the presidency be vacant the MPR will hold a general session for the vice president to render his/her oath taking as acting president. # Impeachment of the president and vice president. The Assembly has the authority to impeach both the president and vice president of Indonesia or either one of the two if probable violations of the 1945 constitution and the laws of the Republic have been committed during the performance of their mandate. # Election of vice president in case of a presidential vacancy. Should the office of the president be vacant and the vice president assumes the office of president, the MPR will hold a general session to appoint a new vice president of the Republic to fill the vacancy created by it. # Election of president and vice president in case of vacancies of both offices. Should both the presidential and vice-presidential positions be vacant, the MPR will hold a general session to elect the new president and vice president within a month after the announcement of the vacancy. Such cases may be caused by sudden resignation, impeachment, or death in office.Former powers
Prior to 1999-2002 constitutional amendments, the MPR was the highest state institution, in which popular sovereignty was exercised, and all other government institutions answered to it (including the president). It was also empowered to enact Guidelines of State Policies (), and the president was responsible for executing them. The MPR also, under its own parliamentary rules of procedure, issued Resolutions ( or Tap MPR) and Decisions (). Both instruments are legally binding, but while resolutions bind externally to other state institutions (hence functions as a form ofMembers' right and duties
Member Rights
Members of the MPR are vested with several parliamentary rights and privilege in order to execute their duties. These include: * Right to propose amendment(s) to the Constitution; * Right to express opinions and make a choice; * Right to elect and be elected into parliamentary duties; * Right to defend oneself on alleged violations of parliamentary code of ethics; * Right of immunity from prosecution due to any statements, questions, and opinions made for the purpose of parliamentary duties, except in violation of parliamentary code of ethics and code of conducts; * Right to be assigned certain stately protocols; and * Right to financial and administrative benefits.Member Duties
Along with rights, members of the MPR are expected to perform their duties, these include: * Uphold and promote '' Pancasila''; * Uphold and execute the 1945 Constitution and the Laws of Indonesia; * Defend and preserve national harmony and unity of Indonesia; * Put ahead the national interests over individual or group interests; and * Act as a proper representatives of the people and their constituent regions.List of speakers
Notes
References
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