Shan State Hluttaw

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Founded8 February 2016
Speaker
Sai Long Hseng, USDP
since 8 February 2016
Deputy Speaker
Sao Aung Myat, USDP
since 8 February 2016
Shan State Hluttaw

ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်လွှတ်တော်, လုမ်းတႅၼ်းၽွင်းၸိုင်ႈတႆး
2nd State Hluttaw
Type
Type
History
Founded8 February 2016
Leadership
Speaker
Sai Long Hseng, USDP
since 8 February 2016
Deputy Speaker
Sao Aung Myat, USDP
since 8 February 2016
Structure
Seats137
103 elected MPs
34 military appointees
Political groups
  Military (34)

  Union Solidarity and Development Party (24)*
  Shan Nationalities League for Democracy (26)
  National League for Democracy (33)*
  Ta'ang National Party (7)
  Pa-O National Organization (7)
  Lahu National Development Party (1)*
  Wa Democratic Party (1)
  Shan Nationalities Democratic Party (0)
  Akha National Development Party (0)*
  Kokang Democracy and Unity Party (0)
  Lisu National Development Party (0)*
  Wa National Unity Party (0)
  Independent (1)*

  Vacant (12)
Elections
Last election
8 November 2020
Meeting place

State Hluttaw Meeting Hall
Taunggyi, Shan State
Website
shanstate.hluttaw.mm
Footnotes
  • Includes two Ethnic Ministers (Intha, Kayan) from the NLD,
    one Ethnic Minister (Bamar) from USDP,
    one Ethnic Minister (Lisu) from Lisu NDP,
    one Ethnic Minister (Lahu) from Lahu NDP,
    one Ethnic Minister (Akha) from ANDP,
    one independent Ethnic Minister (Kachin)

Shan State Hluttaw (Burmese: ရှမ်းပြည်နယ်လွှတ်တော်, Shan: လုမ်းတႅၼ်းၽွင်းၸိုင်ႈတႆး) is the legislature of Shan State in Myanmar, established on February 8, 2016. It is a unicameral body, consisting of 137 members—103 elected members and 34 military representatives.[1][2] As of February 2016,[3] Sai Long Hseng of the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) led the Hluttaw.

Seats of Shan State Hluttaw by Parties (November 2010)
Party Seats Net Gain/Loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/-
USDP 54 37.76
SNDP 31 21.68
PNO 6 4.2
TNP 4 2.8
Inn National Development Party 3 2.1
WDP 3 2.1
Kayan National Party 2 1.4
LNDP 1 0.7
NUP 1 0.7
Independent 2 1.4
Military appointees 36 25.17
Total 143 100

General Election results (Nov 2015)

See also

References

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