FACTBOX-Some facts about Kuwait's political system
KUWAIT, May 14 (Reuters) - Kuwaitis will vote in parliamentary election on Saturday, two months after the ruler of the major oil exporter dissolved parliament to end a crisis with the government.
Following are some facts about the Gulf Arab state's political system:
* Kuwait gained independence from Britain in 1961 and the first fully-elected parliament in the Gulf Arab region was voted in in 1963.
* Kuwait has a 50-seat parliament with a history of challenging the government, unusual for a region dominated by families. Deputies have to approve the state budget and all major laws. They often exercise their right to question ministers, sometimes prompting them to resign under pressure.
* Kuwait's ruler, Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, has the last say in policy. He can dissolve the assembly and appoint new governments. Key cabinet portfolios such as defence, interior and foreign affairs are held by members of the ruling al-Sabah family none of whom have ever held a parliament seat.
* The emir or his predecessors have dissolved parliament five times since its establishment -- in 2008, 2006, 1999, 1986 and 1976. According to Kuwaiti law, elections must be held within 60 days of the assembly being dissolved, but rulers have ignored this rule before, suspending the assembly for five years from 1976 and six years from 1986.
* Kuwait does not allow political parties but tolerates informal political groups. These include the hardline Islamist Salafist movement, the liberal Democratic Forum Bloc, the Shi'ite Muslim-led National Islamic Coalition, the Islamist Ummah Party, the Islamic Constitutional Movement and the liberal Popular Action Bloc.
* Parliament passed a law in May 2005 giving women the right to vote and run in elections for the National Assembly. No woman was elected in the last vote in 2006. Continued...




