The Shura Council was established on 20 February 2001 by amendments to the constitution.[7] Following the amendments, then-president
Ali Abdullah Saleh appointed 111 members to the new council on 28 April 2001.[8] As a result of the civil war, two bodies use the name of the Shura Council: One is based in Sanaa[9] under Houthi control,[10] with the other aligned with the Presidential Leadership Council, based in
Aden.[11][12] Some proposals have come forward to make changes to it: in 2015 it was proposed to expand the membership of the council,[13] while in the same year it was also proposed during talks with the UN that the Shura Council be replaced with a transitional upper house which would consist more of underrepresented groups.[14]
Role
The constitution outlines a number of duties for the Shura Council, primarily consisting of consultative roles to the president,[15] though also including a role in the presidential election process: presidential nominees are vetted for qualifications by, and confirmed in joint sessions of the Council and the House of Representatives.[1][16] The constitution also creates a number of qualifications for candidates to the Council, and provides for the method of selection thereto:
The Consultative Council shall consist of (111) members to be directly appointed by the President of the Republic. Members of the Council shall not be drawn from the House of Representatives or from local councils. [...] Council members shall have to attain the age of forty and shall be required to take the oath of office in the presence of the President of the Republic.[4]
The Council also meets with the House to vote on budgets and treaties, among other purposes as outlined by the President.[7]
Leadership
The leader of the council is known as the Speaker. Currently this role is fulfilled in the Aden-based council by Ahmed Obaid bin Dagher,[17] who was appointed in 2021 along with two deputies, Abdullah Muhammad Abu Al-Ghaith and Taha Abdullah Jaafar Aman. This decision was criticized, however, by the
Southern Transitional Council, as undermining the
Riyadh Agreement.[12] The speaker of the Sanaa council is Muhammad Hussein al-Aidarous.[18]
^Currently the powers of the president are exercised by the Presidential Leadership Council in areas under their control,[5] and by the
Supreme Political Council in areas under Houthi control.[6]
^Kabalan, Marwan (21 November 2018).
"Why Saudi Arabia's foreign policy is failing". Al-Jazeera.
Archived from the original on 17 October 2022. Retrieved 17 October 2022. Yet, it was the Houthis' takeover of the Yemeni capital Sanaa in September 2014, that shook Saudi Arabia to the core.