House of Commons
450 elected MPs: 300 constituency representatives and 150 proportional representatives.
Unity - Heritage - Progress
The proposed House of Commons has 450 MPs: 300 constituency seats and 150 proportional representation seats.

Electoral Model
Voters would cast one vote for a local constituency representative and one vote for a political party. Constituency seats connect MPs directly to communities, while proportional representation makes the overall result fairer to political diversity.
Government forms when a Prime Minister can command the confidence of the House of Commons. Parliament can question ministers, review budgets, hold committee inquiries, and withdraw confidence when government no longer commands democratic support.
The system is chosen to balance local accountability, stable government, inclusive representation, and a peaceful transfer of power through elections.
Chambers
450 elected MPs: 300 constituency representatives and 150 proportional representatives.
A review and advisory chamber for traditional leadership, constitutional reflection, and long-term public interest.
Regular, peaceful, secret-ballot elections administered independently.
Parliament can question, investigate, budget, and hold government to account.
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