Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of congress, the Senate and the House of Representatives of Colombia.
[1][needs update][2] Colombia's present constitution, enacted on July 5, 1991, strengthened the administration of justice with the provision for introduction of an adversarial system, which ultimately entirely replaced the existing Napoleonic Code.
Duque won the nomination, and following his victory, he selected the runner-up, Ramírez, to be the alliance's vice presidential nominee.
The judicial branch's general structure comprises four distinct jurisdictions: ordinary, administrative, constitutional, and special.
[7] United Nations World Bank Other Media related to Politics of Colombia at Wikimedia Commons Participants Timeline Key aspects