BEIJING, March 4 (Xinhuanet) -- The legislative powers
of the National People's Congress (NPC) and its Standing
Committee are defined by the Constitution of China.
According to the Constitution, the NPC exercises the
following legislative powers:
-- To amend the Constitution (In China, amendments to
the Constitution are to be proposed by the Standing Committee
of the NPC or by more than one-fifth of all deputies to
the NPC and adopted by a majority affirmative vote of more
than two-thirds of all the deputies);
-- To enact and amend basic statutes concerning criminal
offenses and civil affairs;
-- To enact and amend statutes concerning State organs,
which generally refer to various kinds of organic laws;
and
-- To enact and amend basic statutes concerning other
matters, such as laws on election, nationality and marriage.
The NPC Standing Committee exercises the following powers:
-- To enact and amend statutes other than those that
must be enacted by the NPC;
-- To enact, when the NPC is not in session, partial
supplements and amendments to statutes enacted by the NPC
providedthat they do not contravene the basic principles
of these statutes;
-- To interpret the Constitution and statutes;
-- To annul administrative rules and regulations, decisions
andorders of the State Council that contravene the Constitution
or the statutes; and
-- To annul local regulations or decisions of the organs
of state power of provinces, autonomous regions and centrally-administered
municipalities that contravene the Constitution and the
statutes or the administrative rules and regulations.