Jump to content

Senate of Spain

Coordinates: 40°25′14″N 3°42′46″W / 40.42056°N 3.71278°W / 40.42056; -3.71278
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Togiad (talk | contribs) at 13:50, 4 July 2017 (Presidents of the Spanish Senate). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Senate

Senado
XII Legislature
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
History
Founded1837 (disband 1923-1977)
1978 (reinstituted)
Leadership
First Vice President
Second Vice President
Majority leader
Minority leader
Structure
Seats266
Political groups
Government (149)
  •   PP (149)

Opposition (117)

Elections
Limited voting
Meeting place
Palacio del Senado
Centro, Madrid
Kingdom of Spain
Website
www.senado.es

The Senate (Template:Lang-es) is the upper house of Spain's parliament, the Cortes Generales. It is made up of 265 members: 208 elected by popular vote, and 57 appointed by the regional legislatures. All senators serve four-year terms, though regional legislatures may recall their appointees at any time.

History

The Spanish senate was instituted by the constitution of 1837 under the regency of Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies. It remained under the regimes of the constitutions of 1845, 1856, 1869 and 1876. It was composed, at that latter time, of three main categories: senators by their own right, senators for life and senators elected. This chamber was suppressed after the coup of General Miguel Primo de Rivera in 1923.

Only after the Spanish transition to democracy in 1978 was it re-instituted.

Organization

Senators form groups along party lines. Parties with fewer than ten senators form the Mixed Group. If the membership of an existing group falls below six during a session, it is merged into the Mixed Group at the next session. For example, Coalición Canaria lost its senate caucus in 2008 after electoral losses reduced its group from six to two. The Basque Nationalist Party, falling from seven to four, "borrowed" senators from the ruling Socialist Party to form their group; in exchange, they supported the election of socialist Javier Rojo as President of the Senate. The PNV group is again under threshold after returning the borrowed Socialists, and it faces dissolution after the current session.

Legally, 133 seats are required for an absolute majority, vacant seats notwithstanding.

Elections to the Senate

To date, senate elections have coincided with elections to the lower house, but the President of the Government (i.e., the Prime Minister) may legally advise the king to call elections for one chamber only, under article 115 of the Spanish Constitution. While the Congress of Deputies is chosen by party list proportional representation, the members of the senate are chosen in two distinct ways: popular election by limited voting and appointment from regional legislatures.

Directly elected members

Most members of the senate (currently 208 of 266) are directly elected by the people. Each province elects four senators without regard to population. Insular provinces are treated specially. The larger islands of the Balearics (Baleares) and Canaries (Canarias) – Majorca, Gran Canaria, and Tenerife – are assigned three seats each, and the smaller islands - Minorca, Ibiza-Formentera, Fuerteventura, Gomera, Hierro, Lanzarote and La Palma – one each; Ceuta and Melilla are assigned two seats each. This allocation is heavily weighted in favor of small provinces; Madrid, with roughly 6 million people, and Soria, with 100,000 inhabitants, are each represented by four senators.

In non-insular constituencies, each party nominates three candidates. Candidates' names are organized in columns by party on a large (DIN A3 or larger) ochre-colored ballot called a sábana or bedsheet.

Each voter may mark up to three candidates' names, from any party. This is the only occasion when Spanish voters vote for individuals rather than a party list. Panachage is allowed, but typically voters cast all three votes for candidates of a single party. As a result, the four Senators are usually the three candidates from the most popular party and the first placed candidate from the next most popular.

Before 2011, a party could not choose the order of its candidates on the ballot paper; candidates were sorted alphabetically by surname. When a party did not get all three of its candidates elected, this arrangement favored candidates with surnames early in the alphabet. This was the case for 2nd placed parties in every province and for both parties in tight races when voters did not vote for three candidates of the same party (panachage).

Regional legislatures-appointed members

Article 69.5 of the Spanish Constitution empowers the legislative assembly of each autonomous community of Spain to appoint a senate delegation from its own ranks, with one Senator per one million citizens, rounded up. Demographic growth increased the combined size of the regional delegations from 51 to 56 in 2008 for the 9th term.

Conventionally, the proportions of the regional delegations mimic their legislative assemblies, as required in principle by Article 69.5 of the constitution. However, Autonomous Communities have considerable leeway, and a motion to appoint the delegation often requires no more than a plurality. Two anomalous examples are:

  • After the 2007 election, the single senator from the Balearic Islands was from neither the largest bloc (the People's Party, with 28 of 59 seats), nor the second-largest (the PSOE, with 16), but in fact from the fourth-largest bloc, the Socialist Party of Majorca, which held only four of 59 seats. This arrangement was part of a five-party coalition agreement. This anomaly was resolved in 2008, when the Balearic Islands gained a second senate seat which was filled by the PP.
  • Since 2003, the PSOE has ruled Aragon with support from regionalist parties. In the 2007 election, it won 30 of 67 seats. Nevertheless, Aragon's two appointed senators came from the opposition People's Party (23 seats) and the regionalist Aragonese Party (9 seats).

Due to population growth, Andalusia, the Balearic and Canary Islands, Catalonia, and Madrid each gained a new senator in 2008. Andalusia was the last Autonomous Community to allocate its new seat; it rebuilt its entire delegation after its 2008 regional elections. The distribution after the 2015 election was:

File:Senate ES candidates sheet.jpg
The candidates sheet for Madrid with 3 votes cast
Autonomous Community Population (2015) Senators Senator/pop.-ratio Distribution
Andalusia 8,399,043 9 933,227          

       

Aragon 1,317,847 2 658,924    
Asturias 1,051,229 2 525,615    
Balearic Islands 1,104,479 2 552,240    
Basque Country 2,189,257 3 729,752      
Canary Islands 2,100,306 3 700,102      
Cantabria 585,179 1 585,179  
Castile and León 2,472,052 3 824,017      
Castilla-La Mancha 2,059,191 3 686,397      
Catalonia 7,508,106 8 938,513        

       

Extremadura 1,092,997 2 546,499    
Galicia 2,732,347 3 910,782      
La Rioja 317,053 1 317,053  
Madrid 6,436,996 7 919,571      

       

Murcia 1,467,288 2 733,644    
Navarre 640,476 1 640,476  
Valencian Community 4,980,689 6 830,115      

     

Total 46,454,535 58 800,940 Source: [1]

Key:

Composition

The last election was held on 26 June 2016. The composition of the 12th Senate is:

Political party/group Elected Appointed Total
colspan="2" style="background-color: Template:People's Party (Spain)/meta/color"| People's Party Group in the Senate 128 21 149
colspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Spanish Socialist Workers' Party/meta/color"| Socialist Group 42 20 62
colspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Unidos Podemos/meta/color"| United We CanIn Common We CanIn Tide Group 15 6 21
colspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Republican Left of Catalonia/meta/color"| Republican Left Group 10 2 12
colspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Basque Nationalist Party/meta/color"| Basque Group in the Senate (EAJ-PNV) 5 1 6
style="background-color: Template:Catalan Democratic Party/meta/color"| Catalan European Democratic Party 2 2 4
style="background-color: Template:Citizens (Spanish political party)/meta/color"| Citizens–Party of the Citizenry 0 3 3
style="background-color: Template:Canarian Coalition/meta/color"| Canarian Coalition 1 1 2
style="background-color: Template:Coalició Compromís/meta/color"| Commitment Coalition 1 1 2
style="background-color: Template:EH Bildu/meta/color"| Basque Country Unite 0 1 1
style="background-color: Template:Gomera Socialist Group/meta/color"| Gomera Socialist Group 1 0 1
style="background-color: Template:Navarrese People's Union/meta/color"| Navarrese People's Union 1 0 1
style="background-color: Template:Asturias Forum/meta/color"| Asturias Forum 1 0 1
style="background-color: Template:New Canaries/meta/color"| New Canaries 1 0 1
Total 208 58 266

Role

The Spanish parliamentary system is bicameral but asymmetric. The Congress of Deputies has more independent functions, and it can also override most Senate measures. Only the Congress can grant or revoke confidence to a Prime Minister. In the ordinary lawmaking process, either house may be the initiator, and the senate can amend hostilely or veto, the proposal then being sent back to the lower house, which can override these objections by an absolute majority vote. Organic laws, which govern basic civil rights and regional devolutions, need an absolute majority of both congress and senate to pass.

The process for constitutional amendments is slightly more tangled: the rule is to require a three fifths (60%) of both houses, but if the senate does not achieve such a supermajority and a mixed congress-senate committee fails to resolve the issues, the congress may force the amendment through with a two-thirds vote as long as an absolute majority of the senate was in favour.

On the other hand, the senate has certain exclusive functions in the appointment of constitutional posts, such as judges of the Constitutional Court or the members of the General Council of the Judicial Power. Although it has never exercised this authority, the senate is solely responsible for disciplining regional presidents (article 155 of the Spanish Constitution). Only the senate can suspend local governments. (Local Regime Framework Act article 61.[1]) It exercised this power in April 2006, dissolving the Marbella city council when most of its members were found to have engaged in corrupt practices.

Senate reform has been a topic of discussion since the early days of Spanish democracy. One proposal would advance the federalization of Spain by remaking the senate to represent the autonomous communities of Spain.

Presidents of the Spanish Senate

Name Constituency Term of office Legislature Political Party
Took office Left office Days
style="background:Template:Union of the Democratic Centre (Spain)/meta/color;"| Antonio Fontán Pérez Seville 13 July 1977 2 January 1979 538 Constituent
(1977–1979)
Union of the Democratic Centre
style="background:Template:Union of the Democratic Centre (Spain)/meta/color;"| Cecilio Valverde Mazuelas Córdoba 27 April 1979 31 August 1982 1222 I
(1979–1982)
style="background:Template:Spanish Socialist Workers' Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| José Federico de Carvajal Pérez Madrid 18 November 1982 23 April 1986 2541 II
(1982–1986)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
15 July 1986 2 September 1989 III
(1986–1989)
style="background:Template:Spanish Socialist Workers' Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| Juan José Laborda Martín Burgos 21 November 1989 12 April 1993 2240 IV
(1989–1993)
29 June 1993 9 January 1996 V
(1993–1996)
style="background:Template:People's Party (Spain)/meta/color;"| Juan Ignacio Barrero Valverde Badajoz 27 March 1996 8 February 1999 1048 VI
(1996–2000)
People's Party
style="background:Template:People's Party (Spain)/meta/color;" rowspan=2| Esperanza Aguirre Gil de Biedma Madrid 8 February 1999 18 January 2000 1351
5 April 2000 21 October 2002 VII
(2000–2004)
style="background:Template:People's Party (Spain)/meta/color;"| Juan José Lucas Giménez Castile and León
(appointed)
22 October 2002 20 January 2004 455
style="background:Template:Spanish Socialist Workers' Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| Francisco Javier Rojo García Álava 2 April 2004 15 January 2008 2734 VIII
(2004–2008)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
1 April 2008 27 September 2011 IX
(2008–2011)
style="background:Template:People's Party (Spain)/meta/color;" rowspan=3| Pío García-Escudero Márquez Madrid 13 December 2011 27 October 2015 4770 X
(2011–2015)
People's Party
13 January 2016 3 May 2016 XI
(2016)
19 July 2016 Incumbent XII
(2016–)
Pío García-EscuderoFrancisco Javier Rojo GarcíaJuan José Lucas GiménezEsperanza Aguirre Gil de BiedmaJuan Ignacio Barrero ValverdeJuan José Laborda MartínJosé Federico de Carvajal PérezCecilio Valverde MazuelasAntonio Fontán

See also

References

40°25′14″N 3°42′46″W / 40.42056°N 3.71278°W / 40.42056; -3.71278