Saturday, August 2

Here’s an overview of the political structure of Saint Martin, which is unique because the island is split between two different countries: France (north) and the Netherlands (south).


French Side: Saint-Martin (North)

Status:

An Overseas Collectivity (Collectivité d’outre-mer) of France since 2007.

Previously part of Guadeloupe (another French overseas department).

Government Structure:

President of the Territorial Council – local head of government (similar to a mayor or governor).

Territorial Council – 23 members elected by residents for 5-year terms.

Prefect (Préfet) – appointed by the French government, represents the French Republic and oversees national interests (security, immigration, justice, etc.).

French Parliament – Saint-Martin sends 1 Deputy to the French National Assembly and 1 Senator to the French Senate.

Legal and Political System:

Follows French civil law.

Subject to French national laws, but the local council can legislate on certain matters (e.g., taxation, development, urban planning).


Dutch Side: Sint Maarten (South)

Status:

A constituent country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands since 2010 (formerly part of the Netherlands Antilles).

Government Structure:

Prime Minister – head of the government.

Governor – appointed by the Dutch monarch, represents the Kingdom and performs ceremonial and oversight functions.

Parliament – 15-member legislature elected by the people every 4 years.

Council of Ministers – executive branch led by the Prime Minister.

Legal and Political System:

Parliamentary democracy with a civil law system.

Domestic autonomy in most areas, but the Kingdom of the Netherlands retains control over:

Defense

Foreign affairs

Citizenship

Judiciary oversight


Cooperation Across the Border

Though politically divided, the island functions as a single economic and cultural space.

There’s no physical border — people move freely.

Cross-border cooperation exists in areas like:

Health

Emergency services

Tourism

Environmental protection

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