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Congress of Deputies (Spain)
 

Congress of Deputies

Congreso de los Diputados
Co-official languages
Basque: Diputatuen Kongresua
Catalan: Congrés dels Diputats
Galician: Congreso dos Deputados
Aranese: Congrès des Deputats
15th Congress of Deputies
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
History
Founded1834
Leadership
Francina Armengol, PSOE
since 17 August 2023
José Antonio Bermúdez de Castro, PP
since 17 August 2023
Marta González Vázquez, PP
since 17 August 2023
Structure
Seats350
Political groups
Government (147)
  •   PSOE (120)
  •   Sumar (27)[a]

Supported by (32)

Opposition (171)

Elections
Party-list proportional representation,
D'Hondt method
Last election
23 July 2023
Meeting place
Palacio de las Cortes
Madrid, Community of Madrid
Kingdom of Spain
Website
congreso.es
Rules
Standing Orders of the Congress of Deputies (English)

The Congress of Deputies (Spanish: Congreso de los Diputados) is the lower house of the Cortes Generales, Spain's legislative branch, the upper house being the Senate. The Congress meets in the Palace of the Parliament (Palacio de las Cortes) in Madrid.

Congress has 350 members elected from fifty-two constituencies (the fifty provinces and two autonomous cities) using closed list D'Hondt proportional representation. Deputies serve four-year terms. The presiding officer and speaker is the President of the Congress of Deputies, who is elected by the members at the first sitting of Congress after an election.

The two principle actors in Congress are parliamentary groups and parliamentary committees (Spanish: comissiones). All MPs are required to be members of a parliamentary group,[1] the institutionalised form of political parties. Groups act with one voice represented by their spokesperson. In other words the Spanish Parliament is a parliament of groups, not individual MPs who are constrained to act only as part of the group.[2][3] MPs can only act autonomously when submitting oral or written questions.[4]

As a result of the 2019 general election, there were 168 female deputies or 48% of all members, making Spain the European country with the highest percentage of women in parliament, surpassing Sweden and Finland.[5]

Constitutional position

House's nature

Composition

Section 68.1 of the Spanish Constitution establishes that the Congress of Deputies must be composed of at least 300, and no more than 400 deputies. At present, the house has 350 deputies which is determined by the 1985 Electoral Act.

Electoral system

Deputies per constituency set for the general election of 2023

The Spanish Constitution establishes that the deputies are chosen by universal, free, equal, direct, and secret suffrage. The election is held every four years or earlier in case of snap election. The members of the Congress are elected by proportional representation with closed lists in each constituency.

There are 50 multi-member constituencies for the Congress of Deputies which belong to the 50 provinces of Spain and the two single-member constituencies which belong to two autonomous cities (Ceuta and Melilla). According to the Spanish Electoral Act, each province shall be represented by at least two deputies, thus 102 deputies already apportioned. The remaining 248 deputies are allocated proportionally by constituency. This distribution can change in each election and it is specified when writs of election are issued. After the General Election, seats are assigned to the electoral lists in each constituency separately, using the D'Hondt method; parties receive seats in approximate proportion to the number of votes each received in the constituency. A strictly proportional system would result in fractional seats. The D'Hondt method resolves this by favoring parties receiving larger votes.

The 1985 Electoral Act establishes a 3% minimum valid votes by constituency requirement (blank votes count towards the total votes, but invalid ballots do not count) for a party to participate in the seat distribution for a constituency. This applies to the provinces that elect at least 24 deputies. At present, this condition applies only to Madrid and Barcelona.

In March 2011, the Electoral Act was modified to require parties that are not represented either in Congress or in the Senate to collect signatures to support their candidacy to be able to run in the election. One-tenth of a percent of those registered to vote in a constituency are required to be on the ballot and each citizen can sign only once for a party candidacy. The Electoral Board establishes the regulations for collection of signatures.

Mandate

The deputies' term of office finishes four years after their election or when the Cortes are dissolved, which can take place jointly or separately with the dissolution of the Senate. Only the Monarch can dissolve Parliament on the request of the President of the Government after the deliberation of the Council of Ministers. The dissolution of the Cortes also takes place if there is a failed legislature or two months after a failed investiture session, in this case the Sovereign dissolves the house with the countersign of the President of the Congress of Deputies. During their mandate, the deputies have some guarantees and privileges to carry their responsibilities out according to Section 97 of the Spanish Constitution.

Bodies of the Congress

Congreso de los Diputados (built 1850): Palacio de las Cortes. Seat of the Spanish Parliament in Madrid (2016)

Exercising the autonomy recognised by the Constitution to the Congress of Deputies, the house is regulated by some internal rules established by itself in 1982 and it configures different government bodies to carry the pertinent competencies out.

Governing bodies

The governing bodies of the Congress of Deputies are the bodies which under their authority the House is manage. Those bodies are the President, the Bureau and the Board of Spokespersons.[6]

The President of the Congress of Deputies is the highest authority and it represents the House and it is, de facto, the whole parliament leader. As head of the Congress, it also chairs the Bureau, the Board of Spokespersons and the Permanent Deputation, and is the maximum responsible authority of the Congress's Police.[7]

The Bureau of the Congress of Deputies is the collective body that represents the House and manages the day-to-day of the Chamber, preparing the budget and making all the necessary decisions to allow the proper functioning of the functions of the Congress.[8]

The Board of Spokespersons of the Congress of Deputies is the collective body formed by representatives of the parliamentary groups and normally, government representatives, that establishes the agenda of the House.[9]

Working bodies

The working bodies of the Congress of Deputies are the Plenary, the Committees, the Permanent Deputation and the Parliamentary Groups.[10]

The Plenary is the central body of the Congress of Deputies which allows the house for exercising their choices. It is the sitting of all the members of the Parliament when half plus one of its members are attending the house. This body represents the unity of the house and it works through the plenary sessions which can be ordinary or extraordinary.

The ordinary sessions take place during the two meeting terms: September to December and February to June. The extraordinary sessions are convened at the request of the Prime Minister of Spain, the Permanent Council or the absolute majority of the house. In this kind of session a particular agenda is presented and the session ends when all items have been discussed.

The Committees are the basic working bodies of the Congress designed to facilitate the work of the house. The committees have the same powers as the Plenary: to legislate by delegation of the plenary or at the request of the Bureau, and to check the Government by requesting information of the Administration or by requesting the appearance of any member of the Government or Administration.

There are two types of committees: standing and non-standing. The standing committees are defined by the Congress's standing orders[11] and non-standing committees, created by the Plenary. The standing committees examine bills and make amendments. The Plenary of the Congress can confer them full legislative power in relation to a matter, so they can approve or reject any bill. There are 23 permanent (standing) legislative committees and 8 permanent (standing) non-legislative committees which have responsibilities for House administration. The Plenary can create additional non-legislative committees at the beginning of each legislature. The non-standing committees are created with a specific purpose and their themes and duration are determined by the Plenary.

The members of the committees are chosen by the Parliamentary Groups with the number of members proportional to the number of seats in the House, which means they are not effective checks on the Government, when the party in office has a parliamentary majority.[12] Once the committees are created they must elect in their first meeting the bureau of the committee, composed of a chair, two deputy chairs and two secretaries. In practice, the largest party always enjoys a clear over-representation in the distribution of chairpersons.[12]

Subcommittees can also be created by the Plenary at the request of the committees. There are two types of subcommittees, the ordinary subcommittees the purpose of which is to discuss and report on a specific issue and the reporting subcommittees, the purpose of which is to write a draft bill to be discussed in the committee. The members of the subcommittees are designated by the committee.

The Permanent Deputation is a body created in order to have a permanent constituted legislative power. It is responsible for safeguarding the powers of the house between the legislative sessions (January, July and August) or when their term has finished because of termination or dissolution. In these three cases, the Permanent Deputation is a temporary extension of the house. The Permanent Deputation is presided by the President of the Congress. It is composed of a proportional number of deputies depending on the numerical importance of the different Parliamentary Groups.

All members of the house are assigned to a Parliamentary Groups reflecting their party affiliation or ideology. The formation of the parliamentary groups takes place at the beginning of each legislature. The deputies (members) who cannot satisfy the rules for forming a group, are placed together in their own group (called the Mixed Group) so that they can still participate in the functions of Parliament.

Composition of the XV legislature

The XV legislature of Spain started on 17 August 2023 when the Cortes Generales were constituted, once the 2023 general election was held.

Bureau of the Congress of Deputies

Bureau of the Congress of Deputies
Position Holder Party
President Francina Armengol Socias sinmarco PSOE
First Vice President Alfonso Rodríguez Gómez de Celis sinmarco PSOE
Second Vice President José Antonio Bermúdez de Castro sinmarco PP
Third Vice President Esther Gil de Reboleño Lastortres sinmarco SMR
Fourth Vice President Marta González Vázquez sinmarco PP
First Secretary Gerardo Pisarello Prados sinmarco SMR
Second Secretary Isaura Leal Fernández sinmarco PSOE
Third Secretary Guillermo Mariscal Anaya sinmarco PP
Fourth Secretary María del Carmen Navarro Lacoba sinmarco PP

Current Committees (XV legislature, 2023–present)

Permanent Legislative Committees

Committee[13] Chair(s) Term
Constitutional José Zaragoza Alonso PSOE 2023–present
Foreign Affairs Juan Carlos Ruiz Boix PSOE 2023–present
Justice Francisco Lucas Ayala PSOE 2023–present
Defence Alberto Fabra Part PP 2023–present
Finance and Civil Service Alejandro Soler Mur PSOE 2023–present
Budgets Carlos Martín Urriza SMR 2023–present
Interior José Luis Ábalos Meco PSOE 2023–present
Transport and Sustainable Mobility José Ramón Gómez Besteiro PSOE 2023–present
Education, Vocational Training and Sports Mercedes González Fernández PSOE 2023–present
Labour, Social Economy, Inclusion, Social Security and Migration Aina Vidal Sáez SMR (CatComú) 2023–present
Industry and Tourism Inés Granollers i Cunillera ERC 2023–present
Social Rights and Consumer Affairs Luis Carlos Sahuquillo García PSOE 2023–present
Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Joseba Andoni Agirretxea Urresti EAJ–PNV 2023–present
Territorial Policy Rafaela Crespín Rubio PSOE 2023–present
Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge Cristina Narbona Ruiz PSOE 2023–present
Housing and Urban Agenda Isabel María Borrego Cortés PP 2023–present
Culture Gerardo Pisarello Prados SMR (CatComú) 2023–present
Economy, Trade and Digital Transformation Pedro Puy Fraga PP 2023–present
Health Agustín Santos Maraver SMR 2023–present
Science, Innovation and Universities María Sandra Moneo Díez PP 2023–present
International Cooperation for Development Susana Ros Martínez PSOE 2023–present
Equality Carmen Calvo Poyato PSOE 2023–present
Youth and Children Jordi Salvador i Duch ERC 2023–present

Permanent non-Legislative Committees

Committee[13] Chair(s) Term
Rules Francina Armengol Socias PSOE 2023–present
Deputies' Statute Manuel Cobo Vega PP 2023–present
Petitions Carlos Aragonés Mendiguchía PP 2023–present
Monitoring and Evaluation of the Agreements of the Toledo Pact María Mercè Perea i Conillas PSOE 2023–present
Monitoring and Evaluation of the Agreements of the State Pact against Gender Violence Adriana Lastra Fernández PSOE 2023–present
Comprehensive Disability Policies María Mercedes Fernández González PP 2023–present
Democratic Quality, Fight Against Corruption and Institutional and Legal Reforms Antidio Fagúndez Campo PSOE 2023–present
Road Safety Marta Madrenas i Mir Junts 2023–present

Presidency of the Congress of Deputies

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Hladanie1.

Congress of Deputies (disambiguation)
Basque language
Catalan language
Galician language
Aranese
15th Congress of Deputies
File:Congreso de los Diputados logo 2021.svg
Lower house
Cortes Generales
Kingdom of Spain
President of the Congress of Deputies
Francina Armengol
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
First Vice President of the Congress of Deputies
Alfonso Rodríguez Gómez de Celis
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Second Vice President of the Congress of Deputies
José Antonio Bermúdez de Castro
People's Party (Spain)
Third Vice President of the Congress of Deputies
Esther Gil de Reboleño Lastortres
Sumar (electoral platform)
Fourth Vice President of the Congress of Deputies
Marta González Vázquez
People's Party (Spain)
File:Congreso de los Diputados de la XV Legislatura de España.svg
Third government of Pedro Sánchez
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Sumar (electoral platform)
Confidence and supply
Republican Left of Catalonia
Together for Catalonia (2020)
EH Bildu
Basque Nationalist Party
Podemos (Spanish political party)
Galician Nationalist Bloc
Néstor Rego
Canarian Coalition
Cristina Valido García
Independent politician
José Luis Ábalos
Parliamentary opposition
People's Party (Spain)
Vox (political party)
Navarrese People's Union
Electoral system
Party-list proportional representation
D'Hondt method
2023 Spanish general election
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Palacio de las Cortes, Madrid
Madrid
Community of Madrid
Kingdom of Spain
Lower house
Cortes Generales
Legislative branch
Upper house
Senate of Spain
Palacio de las Cortes, Madrid
Madrid
Constituency
Provinces of Spain
Autonomous cities of Spain
Closed list
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Proportional representation
President of the Congress of Deputies
Parliamentary group (Spain)
Committee
Spanish language
Parliamentary group (Spain)
April 2019 Spanish general election
Constitution of Spain
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2023 Spanish general election
Universal suffrage
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Snap election
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Provinces of Spain
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Elections in Spain#General elections
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Senate of Spain
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Senate of Spain
Monarchy of Spain
Prime Minister of Spain
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President of the Congress of Deputies
Francina Armengol
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Partido Socialista Obrero Español
President of the Congress of Deputies#Vice presidents
Alfonso Rodríguez Gómez de Celis
File:Logotipo del PSOE.svg
Partido Socialista Obrero Español
President of the Congress of Deputies#Vice presidents
José Antonio Bermúdez de Castro
File:Logo del PP (2022).svg
Popular Party (Spain)
President of the Congress of Deputies#Vice presidents
Esther Gil de Reboleño Lastortres
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Sumar (electoral platform)
President of the Congress of Deputies#Vice presidents
Marta González Vázquez
File:Logo del PP (2022).svg
Popular Party (Spain)
Gerardo Pisarello Prados
File:Sumar icon.svg
Sumar (electoral platform)
Isaura Leal Fernandez
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Partido Socialista Obrero Español
Guillermo Mariscal Anaya
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Popular Party (Spain)
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Popular Party (Spain)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Alberto Fabra Part
People's Party (Spain)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Sumar (electoral platform)
José Luis Ábalos Meco
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
José Ramón Gómez Besteiro
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Aina Vidal Sáez
Sumar (electoral platform)
Catalunya en Comú
Inés Granollers i Cunillera
Republican Left of Catalonia
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Basque Nationalist Party
Rafaela Crespín Rubio
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Cristina Narbona Ruiz
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
People's Party (Spain)
Gerardo Pisarello Prados
Sumar (electoral platform)
Catalunya en Comú
People's Party (Spain)
Sumar (electoral platform)
People's Party (Spain)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Carmen Calvo Poyato
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Jordi Salvador i Duch
Republican Left of Catalonia
Francina Armengol Socias
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Manuel Cobo Vega
People's Party (Spain)
People's Party (Spain)
Toledo Pact
María Mercè Perea i Conillas
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Adriana Lastra Fernández
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
People's Party (Spain)
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Marta Madrenas i Mir
Together for Catalonia (2020)
President of the Congress of Deputies
Constituent Legislature of Spain
Fernando Álvarez de Miranda
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Unión de Centro Democrático
Landelino Lavilla
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Unión de Centro Democrático
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مجلس النواب الإسباني
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مجلس نمایندگان (اسپانیا)
Congrès des députés
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Legislature President Party Start End
Constituent Fernando Álvarez de Miranda UCD 13 July 1977 22 March 1979
I legislature Landelino Lavilla Alsina UCD 23 March 1979 17 November de 1982
II legislature Gregorio Peces-Barba Logo PSOE, 1976–2001 PSOE 18 November 1982 14 July 1986
III legislature Félix Pons Irazazábal Logo PSOE, 1976–2001 PSOE 15 July 1986 26 March 1996
IV legislature
V legislature
VI legislature Federico Trillo-Figueroa PP 27 March 1996 4 April 2000
VII legislature Luisa Fernanda Rudi Úbeda PP 5 April 2000 1 April 2004
VIII legislature Manuel Marín González PSOE 2 April 2004 31 March de 2008
IX legislature José Bono Martínez PSOE 1 April 2008 12 December 2011
X legislature Jesús Posada Moreno PP 13 December 2011 12 January 2016
XI legislature Patxi López Álvarez PSOE 13 January 2016 18 July 2016
XII legislature Ana Pastor Julián sinmarco PP 19 July 2016 20 May 2019
XIII legislature Meritxell Batet Lamaña PSC 21 May 2019 16 August 2023
XIV legislature
XV legislature Francina Armengol Socias PSOE 17 August 2023