Chamber of Deputies (Bolivia)
Chamber of Deputies Cámara de Diputados | |
|---|---|
| Coat of arms or logo | |
| Error creating thumbnail: File missing | |
| Type | |
| Type | |
| History | |
| Founded | 1831 |
| Leadership | |
Roberto Castro Salazar, PDC since 6 November 2025 | |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 130 |
| File:Bolivia Chamber of Deputies 2025.svg | |
Political groups | Government (75)
Supported by (44)
Opposition (11) |
| Elections | |
| Two vote seat linkage compensation mixed electoral system (Mixed-member proportional representation) - the list votes are the same as used as votes for president and Senate elections (DSV) | |
Last election | 17 August 2025 |
Next election | By 2030 |
| Meeting place | |
| File:Proyecto de Ley aprobado en Dputados favorece con predios a la UMSA.jpg | |
| Legislative Palace | |
| Website | |
| diputados.bo | |
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2023) |
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The Chamber of Deputies (Spanish: Cámara de Diputados) is the lower house of the Plurinational Legislative Assembly of Bolivia. The composition and powers of this house are established in the Political Constitution of the State. The session room is located in the Legislative Palace building in Plaza Murillo.
Deputies
[edit | edit source]Deputies serve five-year terms, and must be aged at least 25 on the day of the election.
Electoral system
[edit | edit source]The Chamber of Deputies comprises 130 seats (including the seven special seats), elected using a seat linkage based mixed compensatory system using a two votes: 63 deputies are elected by first-preference plurality to represent single-member electoral districts, 60 are elected by closed list party-list proportional representation from party lists on a departmental basis (in districts of varying sizes corresponding to Bolivia's nine departments with a threshold of 3%).[1] The list seats in each region are awarded proportionally based on the vote for the presidential candidates, subtracting the number of single-member districts won (to provide mixed-member proportional representation). The remaining seven seats are reserved indigenous seats elected by the usos y costumbres. A voter can only vote in one of either the normal constituencies or special constituencies (coexistence).
The election uses the same votes as the votes for the President and the Senate, making it a double (triple) simultaneous vote. Voters may therefore not split their ticket between these elections, but they may vote for a candidate of a different list in the election of the Chamber as the deputies from the single-member districts are elected using separate votes.
Party lists are required to alternate between men and women, and in the single-member districts, men are required to run with a female alternate, and vice versa. At least 50% of the deputies from single-member districts are required to be women.
Elections
[edit | edit source]2025 election
[edit | edit source]| Party / coalition | Popular vote | % | MPs | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seats | +/– | ||||
| Christian Democratic Party | 1,683,891 | 32.15 | 49 | Increase 29 | |
| Libre – Liberty and Democracy | 1,397,226 | 26.68 | 39 | Steady 0 | |
| Unity | 1,039,426 | 19.85 | 26 | Increase 26 | |
| Popular Alliance | 439,388 | 8.39 | 8 | New | |
| Autonomy for Bolivia – Súmate | 347,574 | 6.64 | 5 | New | |
| Movimiento al Socialismo | 166,917 | 3.19 | 2 | Decrease 73 | |
| Force of the People | 86,154 | 1.65 | 0 | Decrease 16 | |
| Liberty and Progress ADN | 76,349 | 1.46 | 0 | Steady 0 | |
Parliamentary parties
[edit | edit source]References
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