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The head of state and chief executive official of Paraguay is a president, who is elected to a single five-year term by a simple majority vote of the electorate. A vice president is elected concurrently under the same conditions. The president is assisted by a council of ministers and is advised by a council of state.
Paraguay’s bicameral national legislature is made up of a 45-member senate and an 80-member chamber of deputies. The political party receiving the most votes in legislative elections receives two-thirds of the seats in each chamber, and the remaining third is divided proportionally among the other contending parties. Legislators serve terms of up to five years.
The leading political organization in Paraguay is the Asociación Nacional Republicana, known as the Colorado Party. Other groups include the Christian Democratic Party, the Liberal Radical Party, the Authentic Liberal Radical Party, and the Liberal Party.
The highest tribunal in Paraguay is the Supreme Court, made up of five judges chosen by the country’s president. Other judicial bodies include courts of appeal, courts of first instance, magistrates’ courts, and justices of the peace.
The armed forces have long dominated political institutions in Paraguay. In 2004 the country’s military included an army of 7,600 people, a navy of 1,600, and an air force of 1,100. Military service by males is compulsory for 18 to 24 months.
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