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legislativo

Legislativo is the term used in several Romance-language contexts to denote the legislative branch of government or the body that holds legislative power. Its principal function is to make laws, but it also approves budgets, ratifies treaties, and oversees the actions of the executive. Legislatures represent the people through elected members and operate within constitutional rules, often through committees, debates, and voting processes.

Legislatures can be unicameral or bicameral. Unicameral bodies have a single chamber; bicameral systems have two

Interaction with the executive: the legislative branch operates within a framework of separation of powers and

Terminology: in Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries the term legislativo is used to refer to the legislative

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chambers
with
sometimes
distinct
constituencies
and
powers.
Examples
include
Spain’s
Cortes
Generales
(Congress
of
Deputies
and
Senate),
Portugal’s
Assembleia
da
República
(unicameral),
Brazil’s
National
Congress
(Chamber
of
Deputies
and
Federal
Senate),
and
the
United
States
Congress
(House
of
Representatives
and
Senate).
In
many
countries,
the
lower
house
drafts
budget
and
revenue
measures,
while
the
upper
house
may
have
specialized
duties
or
longer
terms.
checks
and
balances.
It
can
scrutinize
and
censure
the
executive
through
inquiries
and
oversight,
approve
appointments,
and
in
some
systems
initiate
or
sustain
impeachment
or
motions
of
no
confidence.
The
legislative
process
typically
proceeds
from
proposal,
committee
review,
readings
and
amendments,
to
vote
and
promulgation
by
the
head
of
state
or
government.
Local
and
regional
legislatures—such
as
city
councils
or
state/provincial
assemblies—also
exercise
legislative
functions
within
their
jurisdictions.
branch;
the
broader
concept
is
often
called
Poder
Legislativo.
The
idea
is
a
core
element
of
the
separation
of
powers
in
modern
democracies.