The Spanish Senate reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Spanish Senate

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This article is part of the series
Politics of Spain
The Crown - Head of State
   The King / Queen
      King Juan Carlos I
Cortes Generales - Legislative branch
   Congress of Deputies
   Senate
   Regional legislatures
Government - Executive branch
   President of the Government
   Council of Ministers
   Regional governments
Judicial system - Judicial branch
   General Council of the Judicial Power
   Constitutional Court
   Supreme Court
   Regional high courts
Constitution
   1977 Political Reform Act
   1978 Constitution
   Amendments
Autonomous communities
Madrid (capital city)
The Spanish Senate (Spanish: Senado) is the upper house of the Cortes, Spain's legislative branch.

It has 259 members: 208 are directly elected by popular vote and the other 51 are appointed by the regional legislatures. All senators serve four-year terms. The King has the reserve power to appoint senators whose number don't exceed one fifth of the total (thus, He can appoint up to 52 senators)

The last election was held on 14 March 2004. The results were as follows (regional legislatures-appointed members are counted sepparately):


Start of the 8th term

PP PSOE ECP PNV CiU CC Other Total
Outgoing 127 + 24
151
53 + 14
67
8 + 4
12
6 + 1
7
8 + 2
10
5 + 1
6
1 + 5
6
208 + 51
259
Incoming 102 + 24
126
79 + 15
94
12 + 4
16
6 + 1
7
4 + 2
6
5 + 1
6
0 + 4
4
208 + 51
259
Change -25 +27 +4 0 -4 0 -2 0


(Absolute majority is 130 seats)


Elections to the Senate

In Spain, elections to the upper house are held at the same time as the elections to the lower, but the election method is completely different. While the Congress of Deputies uses the simple
D'Hondt method to allocate seats in each constituency (whose number of seats is determined by its population), the Senate members are elected in 3 different ways:


Directly elected members

The majority of the members of the Senate (actually 208 out of 259) are directly elected by the people. Each
province (except insular ones) form a constituency and is granted 4 senators (population doesn't count here, so the province of Madrid, roughly 6 million people, is highly underrepresented compared to Soria's 100.000 inhabitants). Insular provinces are treated specially, and each big isle (or group of little isles) is granted a number of senators between 1 and 3.

The candidates sheet for Madrid with 3 votes castEnlarge

The candidates sheet for Madrid with 3 votes cast

While the elections to the Spanish Congress of Deputies use party-defined closed lists, in the Senate elections each party appoints 3 candidates (less in insular constituencies). Then, all candidates are printed (sorted by party) on a single (very big) sheet, called a bedsheet (Spanish sábana).

Each voter can cast up to 3 votes (less in insular constituencies) by crossing the empty square at the left of the selected candidate. If more than 3 votes are cast, all votes are null, but if less than 3 votes are cast, the remaining votes are counted as blank votes.

The 4 top candidates are elected as senators. This method usually ends as 3 senators for the most voted party and 1 senator for the next, but sometimes a 2-2 result appears.


Regional legislatures-appointed members

The legislatures of the
autonomous communities can appoint senators from their own ranks. Each legislature can appoint up to population/1000000 (rounded) senators, that is, approximately 1 senator per million of people. Currently, regional legislatures appoint 51 senators even the Spanish population is 41 million because that rounding issues (Madrid's population is 5.6 million: elects 6 senators).

Usually, the legislatures-appointed members reflect the scaled composition of the regional legislatures, but there isn't a legal requirement.


Crown-appointed members

Current composition (start of the 8th term)
Hypothetical composition w/ royal senators

The King has the reserve power to appoint a number of senators that does not exceed 1/5 of the membership of the House excluding the Crown-appointed members. Currently, that number would be 1/5 of 259, that is 51.8, rounded to 52. That number of senators could really change the power balance in the Senate, as shown in these graphics.

In fact, appointed the King 52 senators, the majority line would raise from 130 to 156. The Royal senators could then give a more-than-absolute majority to PP or team with the PSOE and ECP.


External links

Official Senate web page (Spanish)

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