Parliament of Finland (Mannerheim's Finland)

The Parliament of Finland, also known as the Suomen eduskunta, is the bicameral parliament and main legislative authority in the Kingdom of. Originally established in 1906 when Finland was a Grand Duchy of Imperial Russia, Finland's Parliamentary system was heavily reformed after the end of the  and coronation of, moving from the unicameral system initially established to the current bicameral system.

Parliament consists of two houses, the House of the Elected and the House of the Appointed. Although both houses have positions which are both appointed through election, the two differ in the way the appointing process occurs. In the House of the Elected, seats are appointed after candidates successfully gain enough votes during parliamentary election in the electoral provinces through the d'Hondt Method thus why it is known as the House of the Elected. In the House of the Appointed, seats are appointed to Provincial Gentleman for each province excluding Kola and the Åland Islands and the position remains for life or until the Gentleman is deemed unfit to exercise his seat. Furthemore, Members of Parliament from each electoral district vote for a representative in the House of the Appointed using the Alternate Vote system. Furthermore, the Prime Minister has a seat in both houses though their position in the House of the Appointed is diminished.

Both Houses are consider equals and peers. In order for amendments to the constitution or acts to be passed, both houses require a majority vote. Either house can initiate legislature but the final vote can be vetoed by the Head of State and requires an official enabling seal from the Head to be passed. The Houses of the Elected supervise the current Government and the Houses of the Appointed supervise the current Prime Minister.