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House of Representatives (Nigeria)

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(Redirected from House of Representatives of Nigeria) Lower house of the Nigerian National Assembly

House of Representatives
10th National Assembly
Coat of arms or logo
Type
TypeLower house of the National Assembly of Nigeria
Term limitsNone
History
New session started13 June 2023 (2023-06-13)
Leadership
Speaker of the House of RepresentativesTajudeen Abbas, APC
since 13 June 2023
Deputy Speaker of the House of RepresentativesBenjamin Kalu, APC
since 13 June 2023
Majority LeaderJulius Ihonvbere, APC
since 4 July 2023
Minority LeaderKingsley Chinda, PDP
since 4 July 2023
Majority WhipUsman Bello Kumo, APC
since 4 July 2023
Minority WhipAli Isa, PDP
since 4 July 2023
Structure
Seats360
Political groupsMajority (175)

Minority (118)

Others (64)

Vacant (3)

  •   Vacant (3)
Length of term4 years
Elections
Voting systemFirst-past-the-post
Last election25 February 2023
Next election27 February 2027
Meeting place
National Assembly Complex
Abuja, FCT, Nigeria
Website
www.nass.gov.ng
Politics of Nigeria
Constitution
Government
Legislature




  • State delegations

Judiciary
Subdivisions
Elections
Foreign relations

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The House of Representatives (also called Green Chamber) is the lower chamber of Nigeria's bicameral National Assembly. The Senate is the upper chamber.

The Green Chamber has 360 members who are elected in single-member constituencies using the plurality (or first-past-the-post) system, most recently in 2023. Members serve four-year terms. The presiding officer of the house is the Speaker, currently Tajudden Abbas (as of May 2024).

State delegations

The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, assumes a National Assembly for the federation which consists of a Senate and a House of Representatives. The Senate consists of three members from each Nigerian state and one member from the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The House of Representatives consists of 360 members, each representing a federal constituency.

Map legend State Seats
Senate House
1 Abia (delegation) 3 8
2 Adamawa (delegation) 3 8
3 Akwa Ibom (delegation) 3 10
4 Anambra (delegation) 3 11
5 Bauchi (delegation) 3 12
6 Bayelsa (delegation) 3 5
7 Benue (delegation) 3 11
8 Borno (delegation) 3 10
9 Cross River (delegation) 3 8
10 Delta (delegation) 3 10
11 Ebonyi (delegation) 3 6
12 Edo (delegation) 3 9
13 Ekiti (delegation) 3 6
14 Enugu (delegation) 3 8
15 Gombe (delegation) 3 6
16 Imo (delegation) 3 10
17 Jigawa (delegation) 3 11
18 Kaduna (delegation) 3 16
19 Kano (delegation) 3 24
20 Katsina (delegation) 3 15
21 Kebbi (delegation) 3 8
22 Kogi (delegation) 3 9
23 Kwara (delegation) 3 6
24 Lagos (delegation) 3 24
25 Nasarawa (delegation) 3 5
26 Niger (delegation) 3 10
27 Ogun (delegation) 3 9
28 Ondo (delegation) 3 9
29 Osun (delegation) 3 9
30 Oyo (delegation) 3 14
31 Plateau (delegation) 3 8
32 Rivers (delegation) 3 13
33 Sokoto (delegation) 3 11
34 Taraba (delegation) 3 6
35 Yobe (delegation) 3 6
36 Zamfara (delegation) 3 7
37 Federal Capital Territory (delegation) 1 2
Total 109 360
The states of Nigeria, numbered

Current composition

Party Seats
All Progressives Congress 176
Peoples Democratic Party 118
Labour Party 35
New Nigeria People's Party 19
All Progressives Grand Alliance 5
African Democratic Congress 2
Social Democratic Party 2
Young Progressive Party 1
Vacant seats 2
Total 360

Members (since 1979)

Party leaders

Party leaders and Whips are elected by their respective parties in a closed-door caucus by secret ballot. With the APC holding a majority of seats and the PDP holding the highest minority, the current leaders in the 10th National Assembly are: Majority Leader Prof. Julius Ihonvbere From Edo State, Chief Whip Usman Bello Kumo from Gombe State, Abdullahi Ibrahim Halims from Kogi State as the Deputy Majority Leader, while Ogun Lawmaker, Oriyomi Onanuga emerged as the Deputy Chief Whip, and Minority Whip goes to Kingsley Chinda from Wike Camp and Deputy Minority Leader goes to two termed Member from Billiri, Gombe State, Ali Isa J.C.

See also

References

  1. Abdur-Rahman, Alfa-Shaban (12 June 2019). "Nigeria National Assembly leadership". africanews.com. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  2. "National Parliaments: Nigeria". loc.gov. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  3. "Chapter Five of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria: Legislature". waado.org. Archived from the original on 30 May 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  4. "Principal Officers of The House of Representatives". Archived from the original on 21 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
Lower houses of national legislatures
Federal
Unitary
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other territories
Non-UN states
Defunct
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