The Burma Legislature was the legislative body of British Burma from 1936 to 1947. As an elected body, the Legislature of Burma was a bicameral legislature consisting of the 36-seat Senate and the 132-seat House of Representatives.

Establishment

The Government of India Act 1935 separated Burma from British India as of 1 April 1937, and created a 36-seat Senate and a 132-seat House of Representatives.

Presidents of the Senate

Speakers of the House of Representatives

Bandoola U Sein was President of the State Assembly of Japanese-sponsored State of Burma.

Notable legislation

In 1938, the Legislature of Burma attempted to remedy the dispossession of rural Burmese farmers who were displaced by Indians, in particular, the Chettiars, by passing the Tenancy Act, Land Purchase Act, and Land Alienation Act. The Tenancy Act intended to safeguard tenants from eviction and to fix fair rents, while the Land Purchase Act allowed the government to purchase large swathes of land owned by non-agriculturalists to be resold on a tenancy basis to genuine farmers. In 1938, the Legislature passed into law the progressive University Act.

References


Think Burma Is a Democracy Now? Think Again. HuffPost

Photo Gallery Burma Counts Down to Elections Time

Burmese military appoints two women MPs DVB

Burma announces constitutional referendum

What happened to the BURMA Act? Frontier Myanmar