Wikipedia:Notability (people)/Subnational politicians

Drawing on WP:POLITICIAN, the following table lists the subnational parliaments whose members can be accorded presumed notability.

This page is intended as a reference tool and contains a selection of outcomes reached in deletion discussions as an appendix to WP:POLOUTCOMES. It may assist articles for deletion discussions, but does not surplant any Wikipedia policy or guideline.

Presumed notability and subnational politicians edit

The Wikipedia guideline WP:POLITICIAN has been consistently interpreted to accord presumed notability to members of subnational parliaments (legislatures) in federal nation-states. The significance of these subnational bodies relates to their law-making powers. This is in contrast to bodies, such as municipal councils, whose power is limited to administrative, supervisory or regulatory functions. Generally speaking, federal political systems devolve legislative powers to lower, subnational levels (such as a state or province), whereas unitary political systems do not, with legislative power concentrated at the national level.

However, there are countries with unitary political systems that include autonomous legislative bodies (ie bodies with primary law-making powers) due to unique historical circumstances or geographic necessity. Further, there are countries which are nominally unitary states, but operate akin to federal systems with subnational bodies granted substantive legislative power.

Members of local/municipal bodies or members of bodies without law-making powers have generally been denied presumed notability (see WP:POLOUTCOMES); that is, members of bodies only capable of enacting subordinate (secondary) legislation are not presumed notable under the criteria established in WP:POLITICIAN.

A member of a subnational body not accorded presumed notability may still reach notability thresholds through the general notability guidelines.

Note

The column titled "Federal polity" indicates whether the country operates a federal political system. The column titled "Subnational presumed notability" indicates whether there are subnational legislatures where presumed notability can be accorded to members of those bodies. Yellow shading indicates uncertainty.

Flag UN member state Federal polity Subnational presumed notability Subnational parliamentary bodies with presumed notability status AfD precedents
Afghanistan    
Albania    
Algeria    
Andorra    
Angola    
Antigua and Barbuda     Uncertain if members of the Barbuda Council have presumed notability.
Argentina     Members of the provincial legislatures are presumed notable.
Armenia    
Australia     Members of the Parliaments of the Australian states and territories are presumed notable. Members of the Norfolk Legislative Assembly (1979-2015) are presumed notable, whereas members of the Norfolk Island Regional Council (2016-) are not. Members of the shire councils of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island do not have presumed notability. [1]
Austria  [1]   Members of the state Landtage are presumed notable.
Azerbaijan     Members of the National Assembly (Artsakh) and the Supreme Assembly (Nakhchivan) are presumed notable. [1] [2] [★3]
Bahamas    
Bahrain    
Bangladesh    
Barbados    
Belarus    
Belgium  [1][2]   Members of the Flemish Parliament, the Parliament of Wallonia, the Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region, the Parliament of the French Community, and the Parliament of the German-speaking Community are presumed notable.
Belize    
Benin    
Bhutan    
Bolivia     Uncertain if members of the Departmental Legislative Assemblies are presumed notable.
Bosnia and Herzegovina   [3]   Members of the Parliament of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the National Assembly (Republika Srpska) are presumed notable. It is uncertain if members of the cantonal assemblies of the Cantons of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina have presumed notability.
Botswana    
Brazil     Members of the Legislative Assemblies of Brazilian states are presumed notable. Members of the Legislative Chamber of the Federal District may have presumed notability.
Brunei Darussalam    
Bulgaria    
Burkina Faso    
Burundi    
Cabo Verde    
Cambodia    
Cameroon    
Canada  [1]   Members of the legislative assemblies of the provinces and territories are presumed notable. [1] [2]
Central African Republic    
Chad    
Chile    
China     Members of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong and the Legislative Assembly of Macau are presumed notable. Members of the Autonomous Regional People's Congresses of the autonomous regions of China are possibly presumed notable.
Colombia    
Comoros  [4]   Members of the Autonomous Island Assemblies of Anjouan, Mohéli and Grande Comore are presumed notable.
Congo    
Cook Islands    
Costa Rica    
Côte d'Ivoire    
Croatia    
Cuba    
Cyprus     Members of the Assembly of the Republic (Northern Cyprus) are presumed notable.
Czech Republic    
Democratic Republic of the Congo    
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea    
Denmark     Members of the Løgting (Faroe Islands) and the Inatsisartut (Greenland) are presumed notable.
Djibouti    
Dominica    
Dominican Republic    
Ecuador    
Egypt    
El Salvador    
Equatorial Guinea    
Eritrea    
Estonia    
Eswatini    
Ethiopia     Members of the Regional State Councils are presumed notable.
Fiji     Members of the Council of Rotuma are unlikely to have presumed notability.
Finland     Members of the Parliament of Åland are presumed notable. [1]
France     Members of the territorial legislatures of French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin [fr], Saint Pierre and Miquelon, and Wallis and Futuna are presumed notable. It is uncertain if members of the Corsican Assembly have presumed notability. Members of the mainland regional councils are not presumed notable. [1] [2]
Gabon    
Gambia    
Georgia     Members of the Parliament of South Ossetia and the People's Assembly of Abkhazia likely have presumed notability. Members of the Supreme Council of Adjara may have presumed notability.
Germany     Members of the state parliaments are presumed notable. [1] [2]
Ghana    
Greece    
Grenada    
Guatemala    
Guinea    
Guinea-Bissau    
Guyana    
Haiti    
Holy See    
Honduras    
Hungary    
Iceland    
India  [5][6]   Members of the Legislative Assemblies and Councils of the States and Union Territories are presumed notable. Members of the Autonomous District Councils may or may not have presumed notability. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Indonesia     Members of the People's Representative Council of Aceh may have presumed notability.
Iran    
Iraq     Members of the Kurdistan Region Parliament are presumed notable.
Ireland    
Israel    
Italy     Members of the Landtag of South Tyrol and the Trentino Council are presumed notable. Members of the autonomous legislatures of the Aosta Valley, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Sardinia, and Sicily may have presumed notability. [1]
Jamaica    
Japan     Members of the Prefecture Assemblies are not presumed notable. [1]
Jordan    
Kazakhstan    
Kenya   [7][8][9][10]   The 2010 Constitution of Kenya created a devolved system of County Assemblies (see s.185 of the Constitution).[11] Editors to date have not accorded presumed notability for membership in the assemblies. [1]
Kiribati    
Kuwait    
Kyrgyzstan    
Laos    
Latvia    
Lebanon    
Liechtenstein    
Lesotho    
Liberia    
Libya    
Lithuania    
Luxembourg    
Madagascar    
Malawi    
Malaysia   [5]   Members of the state legislative assemblies are presumed notable.
Maldives     [1]
Mali    
Malta    
Marshall Islands    
Mauritania    
Monaco    
Mauritius     Members of the Rodrigues Regional Assembly may have presumed notability.
Mexico     Members of the Mexican state legislatures are presumed notable.
Moldova     Uncertain whether members of the Supreme Council (Transnistria) and the Halk Topluşu (Gagauzia) are presumed notable.
Micronesia  [4]   Members of the State Legislatures (Chuuk, Kosrae, Pohnpei and Yap) are presumed notable.
Mongolia    
Montenegro    
Morocco     Members of the Sahrawi National Council (Western Sahara) may have presumed notability.
Mozambique    
Myanmar     Members of the State and Regional Hluttaws do not have presumed notability. Wa State is autonomous, but does not appear to have a legislature.
Namibia    
Nauru    
Nepal  [5]   Members of the Provincial Assemblies are presumed notable.
Netherlands     Members of the Parliaments of Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten are presumed notable. Members of the Provincial Councils are not presumed notable. [1]
New Zealand     Members of the General Fono (Tokelau) and the Niue Assembly are presumed notable.
Nicaragua     Uncertain if members of the devolved councils of the North and South Caribbean Coast autonomous regions are presumed notable.
Niger    
Nigeria     Members of the Houses of Assembly of Nigerian states are presumed notable. [1] [♦2]
North Macedonia    
Norway    
Oman    
Pakistan  [5]   Members of the provincial and territorial assemblies, including the East Pakistan Provincial Assembly, are presumed notable. [1] [2]
Palau  [12][4]   members of the state legislatures are presumed notable.
Palestine     Members of the Palestinian Legislative Council are presumed notable.
Panama    
Papua New Guinea     Members of the Bougainville House of Representatives are presumed notable.
Paraguay    
Peru    
Philippines     Uncertain whether members of the Bangsamoro Parliament are presumed notable.
Poland    
Portugal     Members of the Legislative Assemblies of the Azores and Madeira are presumed notable.
Qatar    
Republic of Korea    
Romania    
Russia  [13]   Members of the regional parliaments of Russia are presumed notable. [1]
Rwanda    
St. Kitts and Nevis  [12]   Members of the Nevis Island Assembly are presumed notable.
St. Lucia    
St. Vincent and the Grenadines    
Samoa    
San Marino    
São Tomé and Príncipe     Uncertain if members of the legislature of the Autonomous Region of Príncipe have presumed notability.
Saudi Arabia    
Senegal    
Serbia     Members of the Assembly of Vojvodina and the Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo are presumed notable. [1]
Seychelles    
Sierra Leone    
Singapore    
Slovakia    
Slovenia    
Solomon Islands    
Somalia   [14][15]   Members of the Parliament of Somaliland and the House of Representatives of Puntland are presumed notable. Members of the legislatures of the four other Federal member states may have presumed notability. [1]
South Africa   [16][17]   Members of the provincial legislatures are presumed notable.
South Sudan     State legislatures do not yet appear to have been constituted.
Spain  [18]   Members of the legislative bodies of the Autonomous communities of Spain are presumed notable. Members of provincial councils do not have presumed notability. [1] [2] [3]
Sri Lanka    
Sudan     State legislatures do not yet appear to have been constituted.
Suriname    
Sweden    
Switzerland   [1]   Members of the Cantonal parliaments are presumed notable.
Syria    
Tajikistan    
Tanzania     Members of the Zanzibar House of Representatives are presumed notable.
Thailand    
Timor-Leste    
Togo    
Tonga    
Trinidad and Tobago     Uncertain if members of the Tobago House of Assembly have presumed notability.
Tunisia    
Turkey    
Turkmenistan    
Tuvalu    
Uganda    
Ukraine     Members of the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea and the State Council of Crimea are presumed notable. Members of the separatist councils of Donetsk and Luhansk pre- and post-annexation may have presumed notability. Members of the oblast councils do not have presumed notability.
United Arab Emirates     While the Emirates of the United Arab Emirates have subnational bodies akin to those in federal systems, consensus to date is that membership in these bodies does not accord presumed notability. [1]
United Kingdom     Members of the devolved legislatures of the United Kingdom are presumed notable. Members of the assemblies of the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories are likely to have presumed notability.
United States of America     Members of the state legislatures are presumed notable. Members of the legislatures of the Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam and American Samoa are presumed notable. Members of the Council of the District of Columbia may have presumed notability. [1] [2] [3] [★4] [▲5]
Uruguay    
Uzbekistan     Members of the Supreme Council of Karakalpakstan are presumed notable.
Vanuatu    
Venezuela     Members of the state legislatures are presumed notable.
Viet Nam    
Yemen    
Zambia    
Zimbabwe    

★ Indicates an AfD discussion which relates to the status of the subnational jurisdiction, rather than membership in a parliamentary body.
▲ Indicates an AfD discussion relating to a subnational jurisdiction, where presumed notability does not apply.
♦ Indicates an AfD discussion relating to a subnational jurisdiction with no consensus.
‡ The Holy See and the State of Palestine hold non-member observer state status in the United Nations.

Former subnational legislatures edit

Formerly existing countries, such as the German Empire, British Raj or the Soviet Union, have had federal systems or devolved/autonomous parliaments. Similarly, some modern countries, like Indonesia, may have once had a federal system or devolved/autonomous parliaments but no longer do. Politicians of these former subnational entities fall under this provision of WP:NPOL, although there is likely less information available about an individual subjects further in the past.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Erk, Jan (2007). Explaining federalism: state, society and congruence in Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany and Switzerland. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781134082575.
  2. ^ Brenton, Scott (6 January 2022). "Does federalism enhance representative democracy? Perpetual reform and shifting power in a divided Belgium". Journal of Contemporary European Studies: 1–19. doi:10.1080/14782804.2021.2023482.
  3. ^ Keil, Soeren (2016). Multinational federalism in Bosnia and Herzegovina. London: Routledge. ISBN 9781317093435.
  4. ^ a b c Anckar, Dag (April 2003). "Lilliput Federalism: Profiles and Varieties". Regional & Federal Studies. 13 (3): 107–124. doi:10.1080/13597560308559437.
  5. ^ a b c d Bhattacharyya, Harihar (2021). Federalism in Asia: India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Nepal and Myanmar (Second ed.). Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 9781000069327.
  6. ^ Tillin, Louise (2019). Indian federalism (First ed.). New Delhi, India: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199495610.
  7. ^ Gathii, James Thuo; Otieno, Harrison Mbori (December 2018). "Assessing Kenya's Cooperative Model of Devolution: A Situation-Specific Analysis". Federal Law Review. 46 (4): 595–613. doi:10.1177/0067205X1804600407.
  8. ^ Suberu, Rotimi T. (2015). "Federalism and Decentralization". In Cheeseman, Nic; Anderson, David M.; Scheibler, Andrea (eds.). Routledge handbook of African politics. Abingdon, Oxon. ISBN 9781315088563.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Cheeseman, Nic; Lynch, Gabrielle; Willis, Justin (March 2016). "Decentralisation in Kenya: the governance of governors". The Journal of Modern African Studies. 54 (1): 1–35. doi:10.1017/S0022278X1500097X.
  10. ^ Shilaho, Westen K. (2015). "Third Time Lucky? Devolution and State Restructure under Kenya's 2010 Constitutional Dispensation". In LeVan, A. Carl; Fashagba, Joseph Olayinka; McMahon, Edward R. (eds.). African state governance: subnational politics and national power. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 147–177. ISBN 978-1-137-52334-1.
  11. ^ "Constitution of Kenya, 2010". www.kenyalaw.org. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  12. ^ a b Veenendaal, Wouter P. (October 2015). "Origins and Persistence of Federalism and Decentralization in Microstates". Publius: The Journal of Federalism. 45 (4): 580–604. doi:10.1093/publius/pjv017.
  13. ^ Sakwa, Richard (2013). "Russia: Involuted federalism and segmented regionalism". In Loughlin, John; Kincaid, John; Swenden, Wilfried (eds.). Routledge Handbook of Regionalism and Federalism. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. pp. 259–272. ISBN 978-0-415-56621-6.
  14. ^ Dahir, Abdinor; Sheikh Ali, Ali Yassin (8 November 2021). "Federalism in post-conflict Somalia: A critical review of its reception and governance challenges". Regional & Federal Studies: 1–20. doi:10.1080/13597566.2021.1998005.
  15. ^ Tawane, Abdi (7 April 2017). "Federalism In Africa: The Case Of Somalia". ZeHabesha.
  16. ^ Steytler, Nico (2013). "South Africa: The reluctant hybrid federal state". In Loughlin, John; Kincaid, John; Swenden, Wilfried (eds.). Routledge Handbook of Regionalism and Federalism. Routledge. pp. 442–454. ISBN 978-0-415-56621-6.
  17. ^ Haysom, Nicholas (2005). "The "Federalism" debate in South African Constitution-Making Process". In Valadés, Diego; Serna de la Garza, José María (eds.). Federalismo y regionalismo (PDF). Mexico City: Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas - UNAM. pp. 655–680. ISBN 970-32-2500-4.
  18. ^ Morata, Francesc (2013). "Spain: The autonomic state". In Loughlin, John; Kincaid, John; Swenden, Wilfried (eds.). Routledge handbook of regionalism and federalism. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203395974.ch19. ISBN 9780203395974.