Standing or ad hoc committees are established for the purpose of deliberation of issues within the responsibility of the House of Representatives, deliberation of drafts and proposed laws and other general acts of the House of Representatives, and preparation and performing of other tasks for the House of Representatives.
The committees of the House of Representatives give their opinions, submit proposals and report to the House of Representatives about the issues within their terms of reference, and they vote only on those issues assigned to their direct responsibility by the Rules of Procedure or decision of the House of Representatives.
Based on a conclusion of the House of Representatives the committees may conduct an inquiry and for that purpose they may request testimonies, evidence and documents.
The standing committees are established based on the Rules of Procedure or a decision of the House of Representatives.
Ad hoc committees are established based on a conclusion of the House of Representatives.
The House of Representatives elect the chair, deputy chair, and members of a working body from the rank of the Members of the House of Representatives in a decision. The chair and deputy chair of a working body cannot be from the same political party.
The House of Representatives has the following committees:
In addition to its standing committees, the House of Representatives establishes together with the House of Peoples:
and other joint committees in line with the decision adopted by both houses of the Parliament.
The Joint Committee for Alignment of Different Texts of the Adopted Laws is a standing working body with identical status, rights and duties based on the Rules of Procedures, as the other committees of the House of Representatives and it has ten members.
The Joint Committee is composed of five Members elected by the House of Representatives and five delegates elected by the House of Peoples.
The task of the Joint Committee is to submit to the houses a proposal with the solution of the disputable issues caused by the different texts of the laws adopted by the houses of the Parliament, by alignment of the disputable provisions of the law.
The Joint Committee for Alignment of Different Texts of the Adopted Laws is led by the Chair and Deputy Chair of the Joint Committee rotating at the chairing position every six months.
One of them is elected by the House of Representatives, and the other is elected by the House of Peoples. The Chair and Deputy Chair of the Joint Committee have the same rights and duties as other chairs of the standing committees in the houses of the Parliament.