To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Bureaus of the Cortes Generales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bureaus of the Cortes Generales are the governing bodies of each House of the Cortes Generales, the legislative branch of Spain. The Bureaus are made up of the President or Speaker of the House, the Vice Presidents or Deputy Speakers and the Secretaries.[1] Each Bureau is autonomously regulated by the standing orders of its house and its composition its not the same.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/1
    Views:
    4 076
  • MNS Nursing Most important topics of GK|Not to read GK beyond this|Day 3 Workshop|Biggest workshop

Transcription

Two models

There are traditionally, two models for the presidency or speakership of a parliamentary assembly.[2] The first is an individual speakership in which the holder of the office is the sole guarantor of the chamber’s independence and privileges, of which the model is the Speaker at Westminster. In this model, supervising the House's work is performed by others (for example, in many British Commonwealth countries, the Leader of the House).

The second model is the collegiate or collective presidency representing the various political parties within the chamber (the model being the French Parliament). This model has also been called the "continental European model"[3] since it has been adopted by most European parliaments including Spain. In Spain, the Bureaus constitute a true collective presidency of each House.[4]

Functions

As with any speakership of a parliament, the Bureaus have three broad functions: to preside over debate, to supervise administrative matters such as the timetable for public sittings of the House and its committees, and be responsible for the organisation of the parliaments work, such as determining the admissibility of proposals, bills & documents.[5]

Other bodies provide advice to the Bureau including the Board of Spokespersons (Spanish: Junta de Portavoces) made up of representatives of all parties who must be consulted on the chamber's order of business[6] and the Clerk (chief legal counsel, Spanish: Letrado Mayor del Congreso de Diputados) who is also by convention the Secretary General (Spanish: Secretario General). The Clerk, (who is a public servant appointed by the Bureau on the nomination of the Speaker) advises the Bureau on parliamentary law, practice and procedure and charged with the actual administration of the parliament.

More concretely, the functions of the Bureau of the Congress of Deputies are:[7]

  • To define the internal regulation and management of the House
  • To prepare the House's budget, direct and control its execution, and report on its implementation to the House at the end of each fiscal year
  • To authorise the expenses of the House
  • To determine the admissibility of parliamentary papers and documents
  • To decide upon the consideration of all parliamentary papers and documents
  • To arrange the general proceedings of the Congress, draw up the order of business of plenary sittings and of committees for each session and coordinate the business of the various bodies, upon previous consultation in each case with the Board of Spokespersons.

The functions of the Bureau of the Senate are:[8]

  • To fix the starting and the closing dates of sessions of the Senate
  • To determine the timetable of activities of the Plenary Sitting and the Committees
  • To assess parliamentary papers and documents, and decide on their admissibility and processing
  • To take such decisions and measures as may be required for the organisation of tasks and the internal governance and system of the Senate
  • To approve Senate's budget, directing and controlling its implementation
  • To approve regulations on matters pertaining to the budget, control, accounting and procurement for the organisation and functioning of the Senate.
  • To approve regulations to ensure the transparency of the activities of the Senate and the right of access to public information of the Senate

Power to suspend members

In May 2019 following the investiture of four elected members of Congress who were in preventive detention and on trial over their role in Catalonia’s failed independence bid in 2017, and following a decision of the Supreme Court that it was within the powers of the Bureau of Congress to do so, the Bureau decided to suspend the four deputies from all their duties and rights as members of Congress.[9]

Electing the Bureau

After national elections, the first sitting of each house is called the constituent or constitutive sitting, the function of which is to elect the Bureau. The first step is to establish a temporary body composed by the oldest member of each House which acts as Acting Speaker and two secretaries which are the youngest members of the House. This body oversees the electoral process of the Bureaus.[10][11]

The Bureaus' members are elected among and by the members of the houses by means of secret ballot. The Speaker is elected by absolute majority or, failing that, through plurality in a second round between the two candidates that received most votes in the first round. The other members are elected using the single non-transferable vote method which ensures plurality, i.e. representation of the largest parties in the Congress.[12]

After the Bureau is elected, the Speaker declares the House constituted, and adjourns the sitting and notifies the King, the other House and the Government.[13]

Members

Speaker

The Speakers or Presidents of the respective House and are the supreme authority within its Chamber and they chair the Chamber's Bureau.

Deputy Speakers

The Deputy Speakers or Vice Presidents are hierarchically numbered and they deputize, in order of precedence, for the Speaker. This happens in cases of vacancy or absence.

Secretaries

The Secretaries supervise and authorize, with the approval of the Speaker, the Minutes of the Plenary sessions, of the Bureau and of the Board of Spokespersons, as well as the certifications that have to be issued, they assist the Speaker in the sessions to ensure order in the debates and the correction in the votes; they collaborate in the normal development of the works of their House according to the provisions of the Speaker; and they also exercise any other functions entrusted to them by the Speaker or the Bureau.

Senate Bureau

The Spanish Senate is the upper house of the Cortes Generales and its standing orders were passed on 3 May 1994 and they have been modified at least twenty times.[14] The Bureau acts under the authority and direction of the Speaker. The Senate Bureau must be elected in the constitutive session and it is composed by the President of the Senate, two Vice Presidents and two Secretaries.[15]

sinmarco
sinmarco
Bureau of the Senate[16]
Office Name Party
Speaker Pedro Rollán
sinmarco
People's Party
First Deputy Speaker Javier Maroto
sinmarco
People's Party
Second Deputy Speaker Guillermo Fernández Vara
sinmarco
Socialist Party
First Secretary Eva Ortiz Vilella
sinmarco
People's Party
Second Secretary María del Mar Blanco
sinmarco
People's Party
Third Secretary Mª Ángeles Luna Morales
sinmarco
Socialist Party
Fourth Secretary Francisco Manuel Fajardo
sinmarco
Socialist Party

Congress of Deputies Bureau

The Congress of Deputies is the lower house of the Cortes Generales and its standing orders were passed on 24 February 1982 and they have been modified at least twelve times.

The Bureau of the Congress is directed and coordinated by the Speaker of the Congress of Deputies. Because of the large size of the Congress compared to the Senate, the Bureau of the Congress is composed by the Speaker of the Congress, acting as chairperson, four Deputy Speakers and four Secretaries.[1]

centro
Bureau of the Congress of Deputies[16]
Office Name Party
Speaker Francina Armengol
Socialist Party
First Deputy Speaker Alfonso Rodríguez
Socialist Party
Second Deputy Speaker José Antonio Bermúdez de Castro
People's Party
Third Deputy Speaker Esther Gil de Reboleño Lastortres
Sumar
Fourth Deputy Speaker Marta González Vázquez
People's Party
First Secretary Gerardo Pisarello
Sumar
Second Secretary Isaura Leal Fernández
Socialist Party
Third Secretary Guillermo Mariscal Anaya
People's Party
Fourth Secretary Carmen Navarro Lacoba
People's Party

Other bureaus

Each House of the Cortes Generales has their own Committees and at the same time this committees are governed by their own Bureau. As a general rule, both Senate Committees and Congressional Committees and are composed by a Chairperson, two Deputy Chairpersons and two Secretaries all of them elected from the committee members.

There are some exceptions where the chairperson of some committees is not elected. This is the case for the Rules Committee of each House which is chaired by the Speaker of the House and the General Committee for the Autonomous Communities in the Senate, which is chaired by the Senate Speaker.

References

  1. ^ a b Congress Standing Orders, Section 30(2).
  2. ^ Bergougnous 1997, p. 3.
  3. ^ Bergougnous 1997, p. 49,108.
  4. ^ Bergougnous 1997, p. 93.
  5. ^ Bergougnous 1997, p. 47,65.
  6. ^ Congress Standing Orders, Section 31(1)(vi).
  7. ^ Congress Standing Orders, Section 31.
  8. ^ Senate Standing Orders, Section 36.
  9. ^ "Spanish parliament suspends jailed Catalan lawmakers". The Guardian. May 24, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2019.
  10. ^ Congress Standing Orders, Sections 1-3.
  11. ^ Senate Standing Orders, Section 3.
  12. ^ Congress Standing Orders, Section 37.
  13. ^ Congress Standing Orders, Section 4.
  14. ^ Senate Standing Orders.
  15. ^ Senate Standing Orders, Section 5.
  16. ^ a b "Current Bureau of the Congress of Deputies".

Bibliography

External links

This page was last edited on 6 February 2024, at 14:23
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.