President of Nepal
The president of Nepal, officially the President of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal (Nepali: नेपालको राष्ट्रपति, romanized: Nēpālakō Rāṣṭrapati) is the head of state of Nepal and the Commander-in-chief of the Nepali Army.
President of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal
सङ्घीय लोकतान्त्रिक गणतन्त्र नेपालको राष्ट्रपति | |
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Style | The Right Honourable |
Residence | Rastrapati Bhawan |
Appointer | Indirect election |
Term length | Five years renewable once, consecutively |
Inaugural holder | Ram Baran Yadav |
Formation | 28 May 2008 |
Deputy | Vice President of Nepal |
Website | Office of the President of Nepal |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Nepal |
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Nepal portal |
The president is indirectly elected by an electoral college comprising the Federal Parliament of Nepal and the provincial assemblies of each of Nepal's seven provinces, who themselves are all directly elected.
The office was created in May 2008 after the country was declared a republic. The first president of Nepal was Ram Baran Yadav. The current president is Bidhya Devi Bhandari, who was first elected in October 2015. She is the first female head of state of Nepal. The president is formally addressed as "The Right Honourable" (Nepali: सम्माननीय, romanized: Sam'mānanīya).
Origin
Under the interim constitution adopted in January 2007, all powers of governance were removed from the King of Nepal, and the Nepalese Constituent Assembly elected in the 2008 Constituent Assembly election was to decide in its first meeting whether to continue the monarchy or to declare a republic. During the suspension of the monarchy, Girija Prasad Koirala, then Prime Minister of Nepal, acted as the Head of State. On 28 May 2008, the Assembly voted to abolish the monarchy. Ram Baran Yadav was elected by a historic vote in the Constituent Assembly, and was sworn in as the nation's first president, ending a 247-year-old monarchy.
Selection process
Eligibility
Part 6, Article 64 of the Constitution of Nepal 2015 sets the following qualifications for holding the presidency:
- A person shall be eligible to be president if he/she fulfils the following qualifications:
- He/she is eligible to be a member of the Federal Parliament.
- He/she has attained at least 45 years of age, and
- Is not ineligible by any law.
- Notwithstanding anything contained in clause (1), a person who has already been elected president for two terms, shall not be eligible to be a Presidential candidate for the Presidential election thereafter.
Election
The election process of the president of Nepal as per Part 6, Article 62 of the constitution is as follows:
- An electoral college, consisting of voting members of the Federal Parliament and the members of Provincial Assembly, shall elect the President. It shall be done as provided for in law with the difference of weightage in voting of the members of the Federal Parliament and the members of Provincial Assembly.
- Notwithstanding anything contained in clause (1), it shall not be deemed to prevent the formation of an electoral college for the use of the election of the President simply because of the reason that an election of Provincial Assembly has not been held in any province.
- The person who receives majority votes of the total number of existing members of the Electoral College as provided for in clause (1), shall be elected as president.
- If any candidate fails to receive majority votes according to clause (3), there shall be a second round of voting between the two candidates who receive the highest votes, and a person getting more than fifty percent of vote in this voting shall be elected as president.
- If none of the two candidates obtain more than fifty percent of the votes in the voting held under clause (4), then a re-voting will be conducted. Any person getting the majority of votes cast in this re-voting shall be elected as president.
- If a person who is elected to the position of the President already holds a political position through election, nomination, or appointment, the position held by such a person shall automatically become vacant.
- The election of the President and other related arrangements shall be as provided for by law.
Part 6, Article 70 states that the election of president and vice president should be conducted in a manner so as to represent different gender and/or communities. This allows for representation of female and minority communities at the nation's two highest offices.
Incumbency
Terms of Office
The presidential term is five years. A president may be elected any number of times, but not more than twice in succession. However, a president whose term has expired can remain in office on an interim basis until his or her successor is elected and sworn in.
Removal
The circumstances under which the President ceases to hold office as per Part 6, Article 64 of the constitution is as follows:
- If a written resignation is tendered to the Vice-President.
- If an impeachment motion against the President is passed pursuant to Article 101.
- If the term of office expires.
- If he/she dies.
Powers
The president's powers are almost entirely ceremonial. In some parliamentary republics, the president is vested with executive powers on paper, but is bound by convention to act on the advice of the prime minister and the government. In Nepal, however, the president is not even the nominal chief executive, as Section 75 of the Constitution explicitly vests executive power in the Council of Ministers, of which the prime minister is the leader.
Part 6, Article 61, Section 4 of the constitution states that the president is the guardian of the constitution; and compliance and protection of the constitution shall be the main duties of the President. The basic functions, duties and powers of the President are outlined by Part 6, Article 66 of the constitution:
- President shall exercise his/her rights and duties as provided for by this constitution and Federal laws.
- While exercising rights under clause (1), the President shall perform all the works with the consent and recommendation of the Council of Ministers, except in case where the works have to be performed expressly under the recommendation of some agency or official. Such consent and recommendation shall be made to the President through the Prime Minister.
- The decision or order made in the name of the President as provided for by clause (2) and the certification of credentials in that regard, shall be done as specified by Federal law.
Travel
The current president, Bidhya Devi Bhandari uses a Mercedes Benz E-Class W210 Bullet Proof Car for her daily transport, while the Nepalese state car is an armoured stretched Jaguar XJ. All the state cars in Nepal are maintaned per international standard giving all the facilities
The president uses the state carrier, Nepal Airlines' Airbus A330-200 for international travel, whereas a Nepal Army's VIP AgustaWestland AW139 helicopter for travel within the country.
List of presidents of Nepal
See also
- Vice President of Nepal
- King of Nepal, heads of state of the former Kingdom of Nepal
- List of heads of state of Nepal, for a comprehensive list of Nepalese heads of state since 1768
- List of prime ministers of Nepal