Senate (Equatorial Guinea)

The Senate is the upper house of the Parliament of Equatorial Guinea.The Senate was established following constitutional reforms approved in a referendum in 2011 and enacted in February 2012.[2] The first elections were held in May 2013.The Senate has 70 members, of which 55 are elected and 15 are appointed by the President.[5]
Upper houseTeresa Efua AsangonoDemocratic Party of Equatorial GuineaVoting systemParty-list proportional representation20 November 2022MalaboPolitics of Equatorial GuineaConstitutionHuman rightsPresidentT. Obiang Nguema MbasogoVice PresidentT. Nguema Obiang ManguePrime MinisterM. Roka BoteyCouncil of MinistersParliamentChamber of DeputiesGaudencio Mohaba MesuAdministrative divisionsProvincesMunicipalitiesElectionsPolitical partiesDemocratic Party (PDGE)Foreign relationsMinistry of Foreign Affairs and International CooperationDiplomatic missions ofin Equatorial GuineaPassportVisa requirementsVisa policyParliament of Equatorial Guineaconstitutionalreferendumfirst electionsUpper houseslegislaturesFederalArgentinaAustraliaAustriaBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaBrazilCanadaEthiopiaGermanyMalaysiaMexicoNigeriaPakistanRussiaSomaliaSouth SudanSwitzerlandUnited StatesUnitaryAlgeriaAntigua and BarbudaBahrainBarbadosBelarusBelizeBhutanBoliviaBurundiCambodiaCameroonColombiaDemocratic Republic of the CongoRepublic of the CongoCzech RepublicDominican RepublicEswatiniFranceGrenadaIndonesiaIrelandIvory CoastJapan (post-1947)JordanKazakhstanLesothoLiberiaMadagascarMoroccoMyanmarNamibiaNetherlandsParaguayPhilippinesPolandRomaniaRwandaSaint LuciaSloveniaSouth AfricaTajikistanThailandTrinidad and TobagoTunisiaUnited KingdomUruguayUzbekistanZimbabweDependent andother territoriesAmerican SamoaBermudaIsle of ManNorthern Mariana IslandsPuerto RicoNon-UN statesSomalilandDefunctAfghanistanBritish GuianaBritish RajBurkina FasoCeylonCzechoslovakiaDenmarkEast GermanyGreeceHungaryKingdom of IrelandIrish Free StateJapan (pre-1947)MaldivesMauritaniaNew ZealandNicaraguaNorthern IrelandPortugalPrussiaRussian EmpireSenegalSouth KoreaSoviet UnionSwedenTurkeyVenezuelaWeimar GermanyBicameralismUnicameralismTricameralismMulticameralismList of abolished upper housesList of legislatures by country