National Assembly of Laos

It is the only branch of government in Laos, and per the principle of unified power, all state organs are subservient to it.[1] Most of the National Assembly's actions simply rubber stamp the party's decisions.[2] The National Assembly was established in its current form by the Lao Constitution of 1991,[3] replacing the Supreme People's Assembly (the latter also formerly known as the Supreme People's Council).[4] In 2017, construction started on a new National Assembly building, gifted by Vietnam.[6] Parliamentary committees of the National Assembly currently include:[7] On 1 March the Vientiane Times reported that vote counts had not been finalized yet, but would likely be within the week.
UnicameralPresidentSaysomphone PhomvihaneLao Front for National DevelopmentIndependentsVoting systemBloc voting21 February 2021Vientianeromanizedhighest power organisationunified powerone-party stateLao People's Revolutionary Partyrubber stampSamane VignaketVietnamParliamentary committees2021 Laotian parliamentary electionVientiane TimesPresident of the National Assembly of LaosParliament of the Kingdom of LaosPolitics of LaosWayback MachineSouphanouvongSisomphon LovansayNouhak PhoumsavanhThongsing ThammavongPany YathotouGovernment1st (1975–89)2nd (1989–92)3rd (1992–97)4th (1997–02)5th (2002–06)6th (2006–11)7th (2011–16)8th (2016–2021)9th (2021–present)People's Supreme CourtPresident of LaosVice President of LaosPrime Minister of LaosDeputy Prime Minister of LaosConstitution of LaosarticlesHistoryPeoplingKhun BoromLao peopleTai peoplesLan XangVat PhouLuang PhrabangChampasakMuang PhuanFrench protectorateJapanese invasionJapanese puppet stateLao IssaraKingdom of LaosIndochina WarsHo Chi Minh trailPathet LaoLaotian Civil WarVietnamese invasionNeutralityHistory until 1945History since 1945Insurgency2007 coup attemptGeographyDeforestationEcoregionsMekongPhou BiaRiversProtected areasWildlifeWorld Heritage SitesPoliticsAdministrative divisionsConstitutionElectionsForeign relationsGeneral SecretaryHuman rightsLGBT rightsLaw enforcementMilitaryNational AssemblyPolitical partiesVice PresidentPrime MinisterEconomyAgricultureCentral bankKip (currency)EnergyFishingStock exchangeTelecommunicationsTourismTrade unionsTransportDemographicsEducationEthnic groupsHealthCOVID-19LanguageProstitutionReligionSex traffickingCultureAnthemCuisineDramatic artsEmblemFestivalsLiteraturePublic holidaysSportsOutlineParliament of Asia Sovereign statesAfghanistanArmeniaAzerbaijanBahrainBangladeshBhutanBruneiCambodiaCyprusEast Timor (Timor-Leste)GeorgiaIndonesiaIsraelJordanKazakhstanNorth KoreaSouth KoreaKuwaitKyrgyzstanLebanonMalaysiaMaldivesMongoliaMyanmarPakistanPhilippinesRussiaSaudi ArabiaSingaporeSri LankaTajikistanThailandTurkeyTurkmenistanUnited Arab EmiratesUzbekistanStates withlimited recognitionAbkhaziaNorthern CyprusPalestineSouth OssetiaTaiwanDependenciesChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsHong KonglegislaturesFederalComorosGermanyFederated States of MicronesiaSaint Kitts and NevisVenezuelaUnitaryAlbaniaAndorraAngolaBotswanaBulgariaBurkina FasoCape VerdeCentral African RepublicCosta RicaCroatiaDenmarkDjiboutiDominicaEast TimorEcuadorEl SalvadorEritreaEstoniaFinlandGambiaGreeceGuatemalaGuineaGuinea-BissauGuyanaHondurasHungaryIcelandKiribatiLatviaLiechtensteinLithuaniaLuxembourgMalawiMarshall IslandsMauritaniaMauritiusMoldovaMonacoMontenegroMozambiqueNew ZealandNicaraguaNorth MacedoniaNorwayPanamaPapua New GuineaPortugalSaint Vincent and the GrenadinesSan MarinoSão Tomé and PríncipeSenegalSerbiaSeychellesSierra LeoneSlovakiaSolomon IslandsSurinameSwedenTanzaniaTunisiaTuvaluUgandaUkraineVanuatuHoly See (Vatican City)ZambiaDependent andother territoriesÅland IslandsAnguillaAzoresBritish Virgin IslandsCayman IslandsCook IslandsCuraçaoFalkland IslandsFaroe IslandsFrench PolynesiaGibraltarGreenlandGuernseyJerseyMadeiraMontserratNew CaledoniaPitcairn IslandsSaint BarthélemySaint HelenaSaint MartinSaint Pierre and MiquelonSint MaartenTobagoTokelauTurks and Caicos IslandsU.S. Virgin IslandsWallis and FutunaNon-UN statesKosovoSahrawi Arab Democratic RepublicTransnistriaArtsakh (1991–2023)Confederate States (1861–1862)Czechoslovakia (1948–1969)Irish Republic (1919–1922)Norfolk IslandOrange Free State (1854–1902)ScotlandSerbia and Montenegro (2003–2006)SicilySikkim (1953–1975)South African Republic (1857–1902)BicameralismTricameralismMulticameralismList of legislatures by country