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Cantonal Council of Appenzell Ausserrhoden

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Cantonal Council Chamber in Herisau.[1]

The Cantonal Council of Appenzell Ausserrhoden is the parliament of the canton of Appenzell Ausserrhoden. It meets in the Cantonal Council Chamber in the government building in Herisau and is the legislative and supreme supervisory authority of the canton. Its 65 members are elected for four years in 20 constituencies using the majority system, with the exception of the Herisau constituency, where proportional representation is used. The cantonal council issues all fundamental and important provisions in the form of laws. It usually meets seven times a year.

Role

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Basic provisions for the cantonal council can be found in the Constitution of Appenzell Ausserrhoden [de].

The 65 members of the cantonal council are elected for a term of four years. The council exercises supreme power, subject to the rights of the people. It passes laws and supervises the state bodies of the canton, i.e. the Government Council, courts and other authorities. The cantonal council approves or terminates international and inter-cantonal treaties, unless it falls within the competence of the Government Council.

The cantonal council advises on the material, financial and investment planning as well as other basic planning of the Government Council. It decides on new one-off expenditure for the same item amounting to 1–5 percent of a tax unit and on new recurring expenditure amounting to 0.5–1 percent of a tax unit.

The office of the cantonal council initially consists of the president and two vice-presidents; they are elected in a constitutive meeting in June for a period of one year. Immediate re-election is not permitted.[2] In addition, the council clerk is a member of the council office, which forms the executive board of the cantonal council.

The extended office includes the members of the office, the parliamentary group presidents and a member appointed by the non-party-affiliated cantonal councillors.

Committees

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The Cantonal Council of Appenzell Ausserrhoden has the following permanent committees:

  • Audit committee (GPK)
  • Finance Commission (KF)
  • Commission for Education and Culture (KBK)
  • Commission for Health and Social Affairs (KGS)
  • Commission for Construction and Economics (KBV)
  • Commission for Home Affairs and Security (KIS)

The cantonal council elects the members and presidents of the standing committees at the beginning of each term of office.[3]

Parties

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Since the cantonal councils are elected in 19 of 20 constituencies using the majority system, the strength of the parties plays only a minor role. The distribution of seats in the council since 2003 has been as follows:

Distribution of seats after the elections between 2003 and 2023
Party 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019 2023 Seat allocation 2023 Voter share in percent[4]
FDP.Die Liberalen (FDP) 31 26 24 24 24 22
Sozialdemokratische Partei der Schweiz (SP) 5 4 5 6 9 10
Schweizerische Volkspartei (SVP) 11 8 10 12 7 7
Die Mitte 2 3 3 5 3 3
Evangelische Volkspartei (EVP) 2 1 1 2 2
Grünliberale Partei (GLP) 2
Non-partisan 16 22 22 18 20 19

The majority system in most constituencies means that many non-party politicians can be elected to the cantonal council. However, they can join a parliamentary group or form one themselves. The cantonal councillors from the centre, GLP and EVP decided to form a joint cantonal council faction after the election. One of the decisive factors was the close proximity in terms of content.[5] Three other cantonal councillors elected as independents also joined the SP faction, and another independent joined the centre/GLP/EVP faction.

The current party strengths are as follows:[6][7]

Fraktion Seats change to 2023
FDP 21 − 1
PU 15
SP 13
SVP 8 + 1
Mitte / GLP / EVP 8

Members

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Eligibility

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Article 63 of the cantonal constitution stipulates that members of the government council and the judiciary cannot be members of the cantonal council. Members of the cantonal administration who are directly subordinate to the government council or one of its members cannot sit on the cantonal council.

Number and distribution across constituencies

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According to Article 71, Paragraph 4 of the cantonal constitution, the municipalities are the electoral districts. The number of seats is determined by the number of inhabitants, with each municipality providing at least one representative. The 65 representatives are distributed as follows.

Coat of arms Municipality name Population[8]

31. December 2023

Seats
Bühler
Bühler
Bühler 1954 2
Gais
Gais
Gais 3147 4
Grub
Grub
Grub 971 1
Heiden
Heiden
Heiden 4316 5
Herisau
Herisau
Herisau 15'893 18
Hundwil
Hundwil
Hundwil 944 1
Lutzenberg
Lutzenberg
Lutzenberg 1332 2
Rehetobel
Rehetobel
Rehetobel 1773 2
Reute
Reute
Reute 700 1
Schönengrund
Schönengrund
Schönengrund 556 1
Schwellbrunn
Schwellbrunn
Schwellbrunn 1557 2
Speicher
Speicher
Speicher 4453 5
Stein
Stein
Stein 1498 2
Teufen
Teufen
Teufen 6514 7
Trogen
Trogen
Trogen 1862 2
Urnäsch
Urnäsch
Urnäsch 2346 3
Wald
Wald
Wald 909 1
Waldstatt
Waldstatt
Waldstatt 1874 2
Walzenhausen
Walzenhausen
Walzenhausen 2029 2
Wolfhalden
Wolfhalden
Wolfhalden 1867 2

Compensation

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The cantonal council and committee meetings are remunerated at 150 francs for half a day or 300 francs for a full day.

In addition, the following annual allowances apply:

Groups

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Office

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  • President of the cantonal council – 8,000 francs
  • 1st vice president – 1,000 Swiss francs

Audit committee

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  • President – 6,000 francs
  • Members – 3,000 francs

Other standing committees

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  • President – 1,000 francs
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  • Website of the Cantonal Council of Appenzell Ausserrhoden

References

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  1. ^ Amt für Immobilien AR. "Kantonsratssaal in Herisau" (PDF). Kanton AR. Retrieved 2023-05-05.
  2. ^ "Kantonsratspräsidium – Appenzell Ausserrhoden". Retrieved 2022-01-02.
  3. ^ "Kommissionen – Appenzell Ausserrhoden". Retrieved 2022-01-02.
  4. ^ Bundesamt für Statistik (2023-04-18). "Kantonale Parlamentswahlen: Parteistärken mit Zuteilung der Mischlisten auf die Parteien". Bundesamt für Statistik (in German). Retrieved 2023-05-05.
  5. ^ Appenzeller Zeitung (2023-05-05). "Mitte/EVP/GLP mit gemeinsamer Kantonsratsfraktion". Appenzeller Zeitung (in German). Appenzeller Zeitung. Retrieved 2023-05-05.
  6. ^ "Fraktionen – Appenzell Ausserrhoden". Retrieved 2024-06-28.
  7. ^ Kanton AR (2023-04-16). "Gesamterneuerungswahlen Kantonsrat 2023". Wahlen und Abstimmungen 2023 (in German). Kanton AR. Retrieved 2023-05-05.
  8. ^ "Ständige und nichtständige Wohnbevölkerung nach institutionellen Gliederungen, Geburtsort und Staatsangehörigkeit". bfs.admin.ch (in German). Swiss Federal Statistical Office - STAT-TAB. 31 December 2020. Retrieved 21 September 2021.