WE, DON JUAN CARLOS I, KING OF SPAIN, ANNOUNCE TO ALL THOSE WHO MAY HAVE KNOWLEDGE OF THIS: THAT THE CORTES HAVE PASSED AND THE SPANISH PEOPLE HAVE RATIFIED THE FOLLOWING CONSTITUTION:
The Spanish Nation, desiring to establish justice, liberty, and
security, and to promote the well-being of all its members, in the
exercise of its sovereignty, proclaims its will to:
Guarantee democratic coexistence within the Constitution and the
laws, in accordance with a fair economic and social order.
Consolidate a State of Law which ensures the rule of law as the
expression of the popular will.
Protect all Spaniards and peoples of Spain in the exercise of human
rights, of their culture and traditions, languages and institutions.
Promote the progress of culture and of the economy to ensure a
dignified quality of life for all.
Establish an advanced democratic society, and
Cooperate in the strengthening of peaceful relations and effective
cooperation among all the peoples of the earth.
Therefore, the Cortes pass and the Spanish people ratifies the
following
Section 1
(1) Spain is hereby established as a social and democratic State,
subject to the rule of law, which advocates freedom, justice, equality and
political pluralism as highest values of its legal system .
(2) National sovereignty belongs to the Spanish people, from whom
all state powers emanate.
(3) The political form of the Spanish State is the Parliamentary
Monarchy.
Section 2
The Constitution is based on the indissoluble unity of the Spanish
Nation, the common and indivisible homeland of all Spaniards; it
recognizes and guarantees the right to self-government of the
nationalities and regions of which it is composed and the solidarity among
them all.
Section 3
(1) Castilian is the official Spanish language of the State. All
Spaniards have the duty to know it and the right to use it.
(2) The other Spanish languages shall also be official in the
respective Self-governing Communities in accordance with their Statutes.
(3) The richness of the different linguistic modalities of Spain is
a cultural heritage which shall be specially respected and protected.
Section 4
(1) The flag of Spain consists of three horizontal stripes: red,
yellow and red, the yellow strip being twice as wide as each red stripe.
(2) The Statutes may recognize flags and ensigns of the
Self-governing Communities. These shall be used together with the flag of
Spain on their public buildings and in their official ceremonies.
Section 5
The capital of the State is the city of Madrid.
Section 6
Political parties are the expression of political pluralism, they
contribute to the formation and expression of the will of the people and
are an essential instrument for political participation. Their creation
and the exercise of their activities are free in so far as they respect
the Constitution and the law. Their internal structure and their
functioning must be democratic.
Section 7
Trade unions and employers associations contribute to the defence
and promotion of the economic and social interests which they represent.
Their creation and the exercise of their activities shall be free in so
far as they respect the Constitution and the law. Their internal structure
and their functioning must be democratic.
Section 8
(1) The mission of the Armed Forces, comprising the Army, the Navy
and the Air Force, is to guarantee the sovereignty and independence of
Spain and to defend its territorial integrity and the constitutional
order.
(2) The basic structure of military organization shall be regulated
by an Organic Act in accordance with the principles of the present
Constitution.
Section 9
(1) Citizens and public authorities are bound by the Constitution
and all other legal previsions.
(2) It is the responsibility of the public authorities to promote
conditions ensuring that freedom and equality of individuals and of the
groups to which they belong are real and effective, to remove the
obstacles preventing or hindering their full enjoyment, and to facilitate
the participation of all citizens in political, economic, cultural and
social life.
(3) The Constitution guarantees the principle of legality, the
hierarchy of legal provisions, the publicity of legal statutes, the
non-retroactivity of punitive provisions that are not favourable to or
restrictive of individual rights, the certainty that the rule of law shall
prevail, the accountability of public authorities, and the prohibition of
arbitrary action of public authorities.
Section 10
(1) The dignity of the person, the inviolable rights which are
inherent, the free development of the personality, the respect for the law
and for the rights of others are the foundation of political order and
social peace.
(2) Provisions relating to the fundamental rights and liberties
recognized by the Constitution shall be construed in conformity with the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international treaties and
agreements thereon ratified by Spain.
Section 11
(1) Spanish nationality shall be acquired, retained and lost in
accordance with the provisions of the law.
(2) No person of Spanish birth may be deprived of his or her
nationality.
(3) The State may negotiate dual nationality treaties with
Latin-American countries or with those which have had or which have
special links with Spain. In these countries Spaniards may become
naturalized without losing their nationality of origin, even if those
countries do not grant a reciprocal right to their own citizens.
Section 12
Spaniards come legally of age at eighteen years.
Section 13
(1) Aliens in Spain shall enjoy the public freedoms guaranteed by
the present Part, under the terms to be laid down by treaties and the law.
(2) Only Spaniards shall have the rights recognized in
section 23, except
in cases which may be established by treaty or by law concerning the right
to vote and the right to be elected in municipal elections, and subject to
the principle of reciprocity. (This text includes the first constitutional
reform adopted on 27/08/1992; it just added the words "and the right
to be elected" to the paragraph).
(3) Extradition shall be granted only in compliance with a treaty or
with the law, on reciprocal basis. No extradition can be granted for
political crimes; but acts of terrorism shall not be regarded as such.
(4) The law shall lay down the terms under which citizens from other
countries and stateless persons may enjoy the right to asylum in Spain.
Section 14
Spaniards are equal before the law and may not in any way be
discriminated against on account of birth, race, sex, religion, opinion or
any other personal or social condition or circumstance.
Section 15
Everyone has the right to life and to physical and moral integrity,
and under no circumstances may be subjected to torture or to inhuman or
degrading punishment or treatment. Death penalty is hereby abolished,
except as provided for by military criminal law in times of war.
Section 16
(1) Freedom of ideology, religion and worship of individuals and
communities is guaranteed, with no other restriction on their expression
than may be necessary to maintain public order as protected by law.
(2) No one may be compelled to make statements regarding his or her
ideology, religion or beliefs.
(3) No religion shall have a state character. The public authorities
shall take into account the religious beliefs of Spanish society and shall
consequently maintain appropriate cooperation relations with the Catholic
Church and other confessions.
Section 17
(1) Every person has the right to freedom and security. No one may
be deprived of his or her freedom except in accordance with the provisions
of this section and in the cases and in the manner provided for by the
law.
(2) Preventive arrest may last no longer than the time strictly
necessary in order to carry out the investigations aimed at establishing
the events; in any case the person arrested must be set free or handed
over to the judicial authorities within a maximum period of seventy-two
hours.
(3) Every person arrested must be informed immediately, and in a way
understandable to him or her, of his or her rights and of the grounds for
his or her arrest, and may not be compelled to make a statement. The
arrested person shall be guaranteed the assistance of a lawyer during
police and judicial proceedings, under the terms to be laid down by the
law.
(4) An habeas corpus procedure shall be provided for by
law in order to ensure the immediate handing over to the judicial
authorities of any person illegally arrested. Likewise, the maximum period
of provisional imprisonment shall be determined by law.
Section 18
(1) The right to honour, to personal and family privacy and to the
own image is guaranteed.
(2) The home is inviolable. No entry or search may be made without
the consent of the householder or a legal warrant, except in cases of
flagrante delicto.
(3) Secrecy of communications is guaranteed, particularly
regarding postal, telegraphic and telephonic communications, except in the
event of a court order.
(4) The law shall restrict the use of data processing in order to
guarantee the honour and personal and family privacy of citizens and the
full exercise of their rights.
Section 19
Spaniards have the right to freely choose their place of residence,
and to freely move about within the national territory. Likewise, they
have the right to freely enter and leave Spain subject to the conditions
to be laid down by the law. This right may not be restricted for political
or ideological reasons.
Section 20
(1) The following rights are recognized and protected:
a) the right to freely express and spread thoughts, ideas and
opinions through words, in writing or by any other means of reproduction;
b) the right to literary, artistic, scientific and technical
production and creation;
c) the right to academic freedom;
d) the right to freely communicate or receive truthful information
by any means of dissemination whatsoever. The law shall regulate the right
to the clause of conscience and professional secrecy in the exercise of
these freedoms.
(2) The exercise of these rights may not be restricted by any form
of prior censorship.
(3) The law shall regulate the organization and parliamentary
control of the masscommunication means under the control of the State or
any public agency and shall guarantee access to such means by the
significant social and political groups, respecting the pluralism of
society and of the various languages of Spain.
(4) These freedoms are limited by respect for the rights recognized
in this Part, by the legal provisions implementing it, and especially by
the right to honour, to privacy, to the own image and to the protection of
youth and childhood.
(5) The seizure of publications, recordings and other means of
information may only be carried out by means of a court order.
Section 21
(1) The right to peaceful unarmed assembly is granted. The exercise
of this right shall not require prior authorization.
(2) In the case of meetings in public places and of demonstrations,
prior notification shall be given to the authorities, who can only forbid
them when there are well founded grounds to expect a breach of public
order, involving danger to persons or property.
Section 22
(1) The right of association is granted.
(2) Associations which pursue ends or use means legally defined as
criminal offences are illegal.
(3) Associations set up on the basis of this section must be entered
in a register for the sole purpose of public knowledge.
(4) Associations may only be dissolved or have their activities
suspended by virtue of a court order stating the reasons for it.
(5) Secret and paramilitary associations are prohibited.
Section 23
(1) Citizens have the right to participate in public affairs,
directly or through representatives freely elected in periodic elections
by universal suffrage.
(2) They also have the right to accede under conditions of equality
to public functions and positions, in accordance with the requirements
laid down by the law.
Section 24
(1) All persons have the right to obtain effective protection from
the judges and the courts in the exercise of their rights and legitimate
interests, and in no case may there be a lack of defense.
(2) Likewise, all have the right to the ordinary judge predetermined
by law; to defense and assistance by a lawyer; to be informed of the
charges brought against them; to a public trial without undue delays and
with full guarantees; to the use of evidence appropriate to their defense;
not to make self-incriminating statements; not to plead themselves guilty;
and to be presumed innocent.
The law shall specify the cases in which, for reasons of family
relationship or professional secrecy, it shall not be compulsory to make
statements regarding allegedly criminal offences.
Section 25
(1) No one may be convicted or sentenced for actions or omissions
which when committed did not constitute a criminal offence, misdemeanour
or administrative offence under the law then in force.
(2) Punishments entailing imprisonment and security measures shall
be aimed at reeducation and social rehabilitation and may not involve
forced labour. The person sentenced to prison shall enjoy, during the
imprisonment, the fundamental rights contained in this Chapter except
those expressly restricted by the content of the sentence, the purpose of
the punishment and the penitentiary law. In any case, he or she shall be
entitled to paid work and to the appropriate Social Security benefits, as
well as to access to cultural opportunities and the overall development of
his or her personality.
(3) The Civil Administration may not impose penalties which directly
of indirectly imply deprivation of freedom.
Section 26
Courts of Honour are prohibited within the framework of the Civil
Administration and of professional organizations.
Section 27
(1) Everyone has the right to education. Freedom of teaching is
recognized.
(2) Education shall aim at the full development of human personality
with due respect for the democratic principles of coexistence and for
basic rights and freedoms.
(3) The public authorities guarantee the right of parents to ensure
that their children receive religious and moral instruction in accordance
with their own convictions.
(4) Elementary education is compulsory and free.
(5) The public authorities guarantee the right of all to education,
through general education programming, with the effective participation of
all sectors concerned and the setting-up of educational centres.
(6) The right of individuals and legal entities to set up
educational centres is recognized, provided they respect constitutional
principles.
(7) Teachers, parents and, when appropriate, pupils shall
participate in the control and management of all centres supported by the
Administration out of public funds, under the terms established by the
law.
(8) The public authorities shall inspect and standardize the
educational system in order to ensure compliance with the laws.
(9) The public authorities shall help the educational centres which
meet the requirements established by the law.
(10) The autonomy of Universities is recognized, under the terms
established by the law.
Section 28
(1) All have the right to freely join a trade union. The law may
restrict or except the exercise of this right in the Armed Forces or
Institutes or other bodies subject to military discipline, and shall lay
down the special conditions of its exercise by civil servants. Trade union
freedom includes the right to set up trade unions and to join the union of
one's choice, as well as the right of trade unions to form confederations
and to found international trade union organizations, or to become members
thereof. No one may be compelled to join a trade union.
(2) The right of workers to strike in defence of their interests is
recognized. The law governing the exercise of this right shall establish
the safeguards necessary to ensure the maintenance of essential public
services.
Section 29
(1) All Spaniards shall have the right to individual and collective
petition, in writing, in the manner and subject to the consequences to be
laid down by law.
(2) Members of the Armed Forces or Institutes or bodies subject to
military discipline may only exercise this right individually and in
accordance with statutory provisions relating to them.
Section 30
(1) Citizens have the right and the duty to defend Spain.
(2) The law shall determine the military obligations of Spaniards
and shall regulate, with all due guarantees, conscientious objection as
well as other grounds for exemption from compulsory military service; it
may also, when appropriate, impose a community service in place of
military service.
(3) A civilian service may be established with a view to
accomplishing objectives of general interest.
(4) The duties of citizens in the event of serious risk, catastrophe
or public calamity may be regulated by law.
Section 31
(1) Everyone shall contribute to sustain public expenditure
according to their economic capacity, through a fair tax system based on
the principles of equality and progressive taxation, which in no case
shall be of a confiscatory scope.
(2) Public expenditure shall make an equitable allocation of public
resources, and its programming and execution shall comply with criteria of
efficiency and economy.
(3) Personal or property contributions for public purposes may only
be imposed in accordance with the law.
Section 32
(1) Man and woman have the right to marry with full legal equality.
(2) The law shall make provision for the forms of marriage, the age
and capacity for concluding it, the rights and duties of the spouses, the
grounds for separation and dissolution, and their effects.
Section 33
(1) The right to private property and inheritance is recognized.
(2) The social function of these rights shall determine the limits
of their content in accordance with the law.
(3) No one may be deprived of his or her property and rights, except
on justified grounds of public utility or social interest and with a
proper compensation in accordance with the law.
Section 34
(1) The right to set up foundations for purposes of general interest
is recognized in accordance with the law.
(2) The provisions of
subsections 2 and 4 of
section 22 shall also be applicable to foundations.
Section 35
(1) All Spaniards have the duty to work and the right to work, to
the free choice of profession or trade, to advancement through work, and
to a sufficient remuneration for the satisfaction of their needs and those
of their families. Under no circumstances may they be discriminated on
account of their sex.
(2) The law shall regulate a Workers' Statute.
Section 36
The law shall regulate the pecularities of the legal status of
Professional Associations and the exercise of degree professions. The
internal structure and the functioning of Associations must be democratic.
Section 37
(1) The law shall guarantee the right to collective labour
bargaining between workers and employers' representatives, as well as the
binding force of the agreements.
(2) The right of workers and employers to adopt collective labour
dispute measures is hereby recognized. The law regulating the exercise of
this right shall, without prejudice to the restrictions which it may
impose, include the guarantees necessary to ensure the functioning of
essential public services.
Section 38
Free enterprise is recognized within the framework of a market
economy. The public authorities guarantee and protect its exercise and the
safeguarding of productivity in accordance with the demands of the general
economy and, as the case may be, of economic planning.
Section 39
(1) The public authorities ensure social, economic and legal
protection of the family.
(2) The public authorities likewise ensure full protection of
children, who are equal before the law, regardless of their parentage, and
of mothers, whatever their marital status. The law shall provide for the
possibility of the investigation of paternity.
(3) Parents must provide their children, whether born within or
outside wedlock, with assistance of every kind while they are still under
age and in other circumstances in which the law so establishes.
(4) Children shall enjoy the protection provided for in the
international agreements safeguarding their rights.
Section 40
(1) The public authorities shall promote favourable conditions for
social and economic progress and for a more equitable distribution of
regional and personal income within the framework of a policy of economic
stability. They shall in particular carry out a policy aimed at full
employment.
(2) Likewise, the public authorities shall promote a policy
guaranteeing professional training and retraining; they shall ensure
labour safety and hygiene and shall provide for the need of rest by
limiting the duration of working day, by periodic paid holidays, and by
promoting suitable centres.
Section 41
The public authorities shall maintain a public Social Security
system for all citizens guaranteeing adequate social assistance and
benefits in situations of hardship, especially in case of unemployment.
Supplementary assistance and benefits shall be optional.
Section 42
The State shall be especially concerned with safeguarding the
economic and social rights of Spanish workers abroad, and shall direct its
policy towards their return.
Section 43
(1) The right to health protection is recognized.
(2) It is incumbent upon the public authorities to organize and
watch over public health by means of preventive measures and the necessary
benefits and services. The law shall establish the rights and duties of
all in this respect.
(3) The public authorities shall foster health education, physical
education and sports. Likewise, they shall encourage the proper use of
leisure time.
Section 44
(1) The public authorities shall promote and watch over access to
culture, to which all are entitled.
(2) The public authorities shall promote science and scientific and
technical research for the benefit of the general interest.
Section 45
(1) Everyone has the right to enjoy an environment suitable for the
development of the person, as well as the duty to preserve it.
(2) The public authorities shall watch over a rational use of all
natural resources with a view to protecting and improving the quality of
life and preserving and restoring the environment, by relying on an
indispensable collective solidarity.
(3) For those who break the provisions contained in the foregoing
paragraph, criminal or, where applicable, administrative sanctions shall
be imposed, under the terms established by the law, and they shall be
obliged to repair the damage caused.
Section 46
The public authorities shall guarantee the preservation and promote
the enrichment of the historical, cultural and artistic heritage of the
peoples of Spain and of the property of which it consists, regardless of
their legal status and their ownership. The criminal law shall punish any
offences against this heritage.
Section 47
All Spaniards have the right to enjoy decent and adequate housing.
The public authorities shall promote the necessary conditions and
establish appropriate standards in order to make this right effective,
regulating land use in accordance with the general interest in order to
prevent speculation. The community shall have a share in the benefits
accruing from the town-planning policies of public bodies.
Section 48
The public authorities shall promote conditions for the free and
effective participation of young people in political, social, economic and
cultural development.
Section 49
The public authorities shall carry out a policy of preventive care,
treatment, rehabilitation and integration of the physically, sensorially
and mentally handicapped by giving them the specialized care they require,
and affording them special protection for the enjoyment of the rights
granted by this Part to all citizens.
Section 50
The public authorities shall guarantee, through adequate and
periodically updated pensions, a sufficient income for citizens in old
age. Likewise, and without prejudice to the obligations of the families,
they shall promote their welfare through a system of social services that
provides for their specific problems of health, housing, culture and
leisure.
Section 51
(1) The public authorities shall guarantee the protection of
consumers and users and shall, by means of effective measures, safeguard
their safety, health and legitimate economic interests.
(2) The public authorities shall promote the information and
education of consumers and users, foster their organizations, and hear
them on those matters affecting their members, under the terms established
by law.
(3) Within the framework of the provisions of the foregoing
paragraphs, the law shall regulate domestic trade and the system of
licensing commercial products.
Section 52
The law shall regulate the professional organizations which
contribute to the defence of their own economic interests. Their internal
structure and their functioning must be democratic.
Section 53
(1) The rights and freedoms recognized in
Chapter 2 of the
present Part are binding on all public authorities. Only by an act
which in any case must respect their essential content, could the exercise
of such rights and freedoms be regulated, which shall be protected in
accordance with the provisions of
section 161(1) a).
(2) Any citizen may assert a claim to protect the freedoms and
rights recognized in section
14 and in division
1 of Chapter 2, by means of a preferential and summary procedure
before the ordinary courts and, when appropriate, by lodging an individual
appeal for protection (recurso de amparo) to the Constitutional
Court. This latter procedure shall be applicable to conscientious
objection as recognized in
section 30.
(3) Recognition, respect and protection of the principles recognized
in Chapter 3
shall guide legislation, judicial practice and actions by the public
authorities. They may only be invoked before the ordinary courts in
accordance with the legal provisions implementing them.
Section 54
An organic act shall regulate the institution of the Defender of the
People (Defensor del Pueblo) as high commissioner of the Cortes
Generales, appointed by them to defend the rights contained
in this Part; for this purpose he or she may supervise the activity of the
Administration and report thereon to the Cortes Generales.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 183)
Section 55
(1) The rights recognized in
sections 17,
18, subsections 2 and 3,
sections 19,
20, subsection 1,
paragraphs a) and d), and subsection 5,
sections 21,
28, subsection 2,
and section 37,
subsection 2, may be suspended when a state of emergency or siege
(martial law) is declared under the terms provided in the Constitution.
Subsection 3 of section
17 is excepted from the foregoing provisions in the event of the
declaration of a state of emergency.
(2) An organic act may determine the manner and the circumstances in
which, on an individual basis and with the necessary participation of the
courts and proper parliamentary control, the rights recognized in
section 17, subsection
2, and 18,
subsections 2 and 3, may be suspended for specific persons in
connection with investigations of the activities of armed bands or
terrorist groups.
Unwarranted or abusive use of the powers recognized in the foregoing
organic act shall give rise to criminal liability as a violation of the
rights and freedoms recognized by the laws.
Section 56
(1) The King is the Head of State, the symbol of its unity and
permanence. He arbitrates and moderates the regular functioning of the
institutions, assumes the highest representation of the Spanish State in
international relations, especially with the nations of its historical
community, and exercises the functions expressly conferred on him by the
Constitution and the laws.
(2) His title is that of King of Spain, and he may use the other
titles appertaining to the Crown.
(3) The person of the King is inviolable and shall not be held
accountable. His acts shall always be countersigned in the manner
established in section
64. Without such countersignature they shall not be valid, except as
provided under section
65(2).
Section 57
(1) The Crown of Spain shall be inherited by the successors of H. M.
Juan Carlos I de Borbón, the legitimate heir of the historic
dynasty. Succession to the throne shall follow the regular order of
primogeniture and representation, the first line always having preference
over subsequent lines; within the same line, the closer grade over the
more remote; within the same grade, the male over the female, and in the
same sex, the elder over the younger.
(2) The Crown Prince, from his birth or from the time he acquires
the claim, shall hold the title of Prince of Asturias and the other titles
traditionally held by the heir to the Crown of Spain.
(3) Should all the lines designated by law become extinct, the Cortes
Generales shall provide for succession to the Crown in the manner
most suitable to the interests of Spain.
(4) Those persons with a right of succession to the throne who marry
against the express prohibition of the King and the Cortes Generales,
shall be excluded from succession to the Crown, as shall their
descendants.
(5) Abdications and renunciations and any doubt in fact or in law
that may arise in connection with the succession to the Crown shall be
settled by an organic act.
Section 58
The Queen consort, or the consort of the Queen, may not assume any
constitutional functions, except in accordance with the provisions for the
Regency.
Section 59
(1) In the event of the King being under age, the King's father or
mother or, in default thereof, the oldest relative of legal age who is
nearest in succession to the Crown, according to the order established in
the Constitution, shall immediately assume the office of Regent, which
shall exercise during the King's minority.
(2) If the King becomes unfit for the exercise of his authority, and
this incapacity is recognized by the Cortes Generales,
the Crown Prince shall immediately assume the Regency, if he is of
age. If he is not, the procedure outlined in the foregoing paragraph shall
apply until the coming of age of the Crown Prince.
(3) If there is no person entitled to assume the Regency, it shall
be appointed by the Cortes Generales and shall be composed of
one, three or five persons.
(4) In order to exercise the Regency, it is necessary to be Spaniard
and legally of age.
(5) The Regency shall be exercised by constitutional mandate, and
always on behalf of the King.
Section 60
(1) The guardian of the King during his minority shall be the person
appointed in the will of the deceased King, provided that he or she is of
age and Spaniard by birth. If a guardian has not been appointed, the
father or the mother shall be guardian, as long as they remain widowed. In
default thereof, the guardian shall be appointed by the Cortes
Generales, but the offices of Regent and Guardian may not be held by
the same person, except by the father, mother or direct ancestors of the
King.
(2) Exercise of the guardianship is also incompatible with the
holding of any office or political representation.
Section 61
(1) The King, on being proclaimed before the Cortes Generales,
will swear to faithfully carry out his duties, to obey the Constitution
and the laws and ensure that they are obeyed, and to respect the rights of
citizens and the Self-governing Communities.
(2) The Crown Prince, on coming of age, and the Regent or Regents,
on assuming office, will swear the same oath as well as that of loyalty to
the King.
Section 62
It is incumbent upon the King:
a) To sanction and promulgate the laws.
b) To summon and dissolve the Cortes Generales and to call
for elections under the terms provided for in the Constitution.
c) To call for a referendum in the cases provided for in the
Constitution.
d) To propose a candidate for President of the Government and, as
the case may be, appoint him or her or remove him or her from office, as
provided in the Constitution.
e) To appoint and dismiss members of the Government on the President
of the Government's proposal.
f) To issue the decrees approved in the Council of Ministers, to
confer civil and military positions and award honours and distinctions in
conformity with the law.
g) To be informed of the affairs of State and, for this purpose, to
preside over the meetings of the Council of Ministers whenever, he sees
fit, at the President of the Government's request.
h) To exercise supreme command of the Armed Forces.
i) To exercise the right of clemency in accordance with the law,
which may not authorize general pardons.
j) To exercise the High Patronage of the Royal Academies.
Section 63
(1) The King accredits ambassadors and other diplomatic
representatives. Foreign representatives in Spain are accredited before
him.
(2) It is incumbent upon the King to express the State's assent to
international commitments through treaties, in conformity with the
Constitution and the laws.
(3) It is incumbent upon the King, following authorization by the
Cortes Generales, to declare war and to make peace.
Section 64
(1) The King's acts shall be countersigned by the President of the
Government and, when appropriate, by the competent ministers. The
nomination and appointment of the President of the Government and the
dissolution provided for under
section 99, shall
be countersigned by the Speaker of the Congress.
(2) The persons countersigning the King's acts shall be liable for
them.
Section 65
(1) The King receives an overall amount from the State Budget for
the maintenance of his Family and Household and distributes it freely.
(2) The King freely appoints and dismisses civil and military
members of his Household.
Section 66
(1) The Cortes Generales represent the Spanish people and
shall consist of the Congress and the Senate.
(2) The Cortes Generales exercise the legislative power of
the State and adopt its Budget, control the action of the Government and
have the other competences assigned by the Constitution.
(3) The Cortes Generales are inviolable.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 38)
Section 67
(1) No one may be a member of both Houses simultaneously, or be a
representative in the Assembly of a Self-governing Community and a Member
of Congress at the same time.
(2) Members of the Cortes Generales shall not be bound by
any compulsory mandate.
(3) Meetings of members of Parliament which are held without having
been called in the statutory manner, shall not be binding on the Houses,
and members may not exercise their functions nor enjoy their privileges.
(Senate Standing
Orders, sections 37.2 and 3;
48 and
61.1)
Section 68
(1) The Congress shall consist of a minimum of three hundred and a
maximum of four hundred Members, elected by universal, free, equal, direct
and secret suffrage, under the terms to be laid down by the law.
(2) The electoral constituency is the province. The cities of Ceuta
and Melilla shall be represented by one Member each. The total number of
Members shall be distributed in accordance with the law, each constituency
being allotted a minimum initial representation and the remainder being
distributed in proportion to the population.
(3) The election in each constituency shall be conducted on the
basis of proportional representation.
(4) The Congress is elected for four years. The term of office of
Members thereof ends four years after their election or on the day on
which the Congress is dissolved.
(5) All Spaniards entitled to the full exercise of their political
rights shall be electors and may be elected. The law shall recognize and
the State shall facilitate the exercise of the right of vote by Spaniards
who are outside Spanish territory.
(6) Elections shall take place between thirty and sixty days after
the end of the previous term of office. The Congress so elected must be
convened within twenty-five days following the holding of elections.
Section 69
(1) The Senate is the House of territorial representation.
(2) In each province, four Senators shall be elected by the voters
thereof by universal, free, equal, direct and secret suffrage, under the
terms to be laid down by an organic act.
(3) In the insular provinces, each island or group of islands with a
Cabildo or insular Council shall be a constituency for the
purpose of electing Senators; there shall be three Senators for each of
the major islands --Gran Canaria, Mallorca and Tenerife-- and one for each
of the following islands or groups of islands: Ibiza-Formentera, Menorca,
Fuerteventura, Gomera, Hierro, Lanzarote and La Palma.
(4) The cities of Ceuta and Melilla shall elect two Senators each.
(5) The Self-governing Communities shall, in addition, appoint one
Senator and a further Senator for every million inhabitants in their
respective territories. The appointment shall be incumbent upon the
Legislative Assembly or, in default thereof, upon the Self-governing
Community's highest corporate body as provided for by its Statute which
shall, in any case, guarantee adequate proportional representation.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 56.bis 1)
(6) The Senate is elected for four years. The Senators' term of
office shall end four years after their election or on the day on which
the House is dissolved.
(
Senate Standing Orders, sections 1,
18,
46 and
first additional
provision)
Section 70
(1) The Electoral Act shall establish grounds for ineligibility and
incompatibility for Members of Congress and Senators, which shall in any
case include those who are:
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 16.1)
a) Members of the Constitutional Court.
b) High officers of the State Administration as laid down by law,
with the exception of the members of the Government.
c) The Defender of the People.
d) Magistrates, Judges and Public Prosecutors when in office.
e) Professional soldiers and members of the Security and Police
Forces and Corps in active service.
f) Members of the Electoral Commissions.
(2) The validity of the certificates of election and credentials of
members of each House shall be subject to judicial control, under the
terms to be laid down in the Electoral Act.
Section 71
(1) Members of Congress and Senators shall enjoy freedom of speech
for opinions expressed in the exercise of their functions.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 21)
(2) During their term of office, Members of Congress and Senators
shall likewise enjoy freedom from arrest and may be arrested only in the
event of flagrante delicto. They may be neither indicted nor
tried without prior authorization of their respective House.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 22)
(3) In criminal proceedings brought against Members of Congress and
Senators, the competent court shall be the Criminal Section of the Supreme
Court.
(4) Members of Congress and Senators shall receive a salary to be
determined by the respective House.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 23.1)
Section 72
(1) The Houses lay down their own Standing Orders, adopt their
budgets autonomously and, by common agreement, regulate the Personnel
Statute of the Cortes Generales. The Standing Orders and their
reform shall be subject to a final vote over the whole text, which shall
require the overall majority.
(
Senate Standing Orders, section 196 and
third additional
provision)
(2) The Houses elect their respective Speakers and the other members
of their Bureaus. Joint sittings shall be presided over by the Speaker of
the Congress and shall be governed by the Standing Orders of the Cortes
Generales approved by the overall majority of members of each House.
(
Senate Standing Orders, section 5.1 and
second additional
provision)
(3) The Speakers of the Houses shall exercise on their behalf all
administrative powers and disciplinary functions within its premises.
(
Senate Standing Orders, sections 38 and
39)
Section 73
(1) The Houses shall meet annually for two ordinary periods of
sessions: the first from September to December, and the second from
February to June.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 69.1)
(2) The Houses may meet in extraordinary sessions at the request of
the Government, of the Permanent Deputation or of the overall majority of
members of either of the two Houses. Extraordinary sessions must be
convened with a specific agenda and shall be adjourned once this has been
dealt with.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 70.1)
Section 74
(1) The Houses shall meet in joint session in order to exercise the
non-legislative powers expressly conferred upon the Cortes Generales by
Part II.
(2) The decisions of the Cortes Generales specified in
sections 94(1),
145(2) and
158(2) shall be
taken by a majority vote of each of the Houses. In the first case, the
procedure shall be initiated by the Congress, and in the remaining two by
the Senate. In any case, if an agreement is not reached between the Senate
and the Congress, an attempt to reach agreement shall be made by a Mixed
Committee consisting of an equal number of Members of Congress and
Senators. The Committee shall submit a text which shall be voted on by
both Houses. If this is not approved in the established manner, the
Congress shall decide by overall majority.
(
Senate Standing Orders, sections 57,
137-140 and
145)
Section 75
(1) The Houses shall convene in Plenary sittings and in Committees.
(2) The Houses may delegate to Standing Legislative Committees the
approval of Government or non-governmental bills. However, the Plenary
sitting may at any time demand that any Government or non-governmental
bill that has been so delegated be debated and voted upon by the Plenary
itself.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 130-132)
(3) Excluded from the provisions of the foregoing paragraph are
constitutional reform, international affairs, organic and basic acts and
the Budget.
Section 76
(1) The Congress and the Senate and, when appropriate, both Houses
jointly, may appoint enquiry committees on any matter of public interest.
Their conclusions shall not be binding on the Courts, nor shall they
affect judicial decisions, but the results of investigations may be
referred to the Public Prosecutor for the exercise of appropriate action
whenever necessary.
(
Senate Standing Orders, sections 59,
60 and
second additional
provision)
(2) It shall be compulsory to appear when summoned by the Houses.
The law shall regulate penalties to be imposed for failure to comply with
this obligation.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 60.2)
Section 77
(1) The Houses may receive individual and collective petitions,
always in writing; direct submission by citizens' demonstrations is
prohibited.
(2) The Houses may refer such petitions to the Government. The
Government shall provide an explanation regarding their content, when
required to do so by the Houses.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 192-195)
Section 78
(1) In each House there shall be a Permanent Deputation (Diputación
Permanente) consisting of a minimum of twenty-one members who shall
represent the parliamentary groups in proportion to their numerical
importance.
(2) The Permanent Deputation shall be presided over by the Speaker
of the respective House and their functions shall be that provided in
section 73, that of
assuming the powers of the Houses in accordance with
sections 86 and
116 in case that
the latter have been dissolved or their terms have expired, and that of
safeguarding the powers of the Houses when they are not in session.
(3) On the expiration of the term or in case of dissolution, the
Permanent Deputations shall continue to exercise their functions until the
constitution of the new Cortes Generales.
(4) When the House concerned meets, the Permanent Deputation shall
report on the matters dealt with and on its decisions.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 45-48)
Section 79
(1) In order to adopt agreements, the Houses must meet in statutory
manner, with the majority of their members present.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 82,
and 93.2, 3 and 4)
(2) In order to be valid, such agreements must be approved by the
majority of the members present, without prejudice to the special
majorities that may be required by the Constitution or the organic acts
and those which are provided for by the Standing Orders of the Houses for
the election of persons.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 93.1)
(3) The vote of Senators and Members of Congress shall be personal
and may not be delegated.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 92.3)
Section 80
Plenary meetings of the Houses shall be public, except when
otherwise decided by each House by overall majority, or in accordance with
the Standing Orders. (
Senate Standing Orders, sections 22.3 and 6;
23.2;
72, 73 and
102.3)
Section 81
(1) Organic acts are those relating to the implementation of
fundamental rights and public freedoms, those approving the Statutes of
Autonomy and the general electoral system and other laws provided for in
the Constitution.
(2) The approval, amendment or repeal of organic acts shall require
the overall majority of the Members of Congress in a final vote on the
bill as a whole.
Section 82
(1) The Cortes Generales may delegate to the Government
the power to issue rules with the force of an act of the Parliament on
specific matters not included in the foregoing section.
(2) Legislative delegation must be granted by means of act of basic
principles when its purpose is to draw up texts in sections, or by an
ordinary act when it is a matter of consolidating several legal statutes
into one.
(3) Legislative delegation must be expressly granted to the
Government for a concrete matter and with a fixed time limit for its
exercise. The delegation shall expire when the Government has made use of
it through the publication of the corresponding regulation. It may not be
construed as having been granted implicitly or for an indeterminate
period. Nor shall sub-delegation to authorities other than the Government
itself be authorized.
(4) Acts of basic principles shall define precisely the purpose and
scope of legislative delegation, as well as the principles and criteria to
be followed in its exercise.
(5) Authorization for consolidating legal texts shall determine the
legislative scope implicit in the delegation, specifying if it is
restricted to the mere drafting of a single text or whether it includes
regulating, clarifying and harmonizing the legal statutes to be
consolidated.
(6) The acts of delegation may provide for additional control
devices in each case, without prejudice to the jurisdiction of the Courts.
Section 83
The acts of basic principles may in no case:
a) Authorize the modification of the act itself.
b) Grant power to enact retroactive regulations.
Section 84
In the event that a non-governmental bill or an amendment is
contrary to a currently valid legislative delegation, the Government may
oppose its processing. In this case, a non-governmental bill may be
submitted for the total or partial repeal of the delegation act.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 128)
Section 85
Government provisions containing delegated legislation shall bear
the title of "Legislative Decrees".
Section 86
(1) In case of extraordinary and urgent need, the Government may
issue temporary legislative provisions which shall take the form of
decree-laws and which may not affect the legal system of the basic State
institutions, the rights, duties and freedoms of the citizens contained in
Part 1, the system
of Self-governing Communities, or the general electoral law.
(2) Decree-laws must be inmediately submitted for debate and voting
by the entire Congress, which must be summoned for this purpose if not
already in session, within thirty days of their promulgation. The Congress
shall adopt an specific decision on their ratification or repeal in the
said period, for which purpose the Standing Orders shall contemplate a
special summary procedure.
(3) During the period referred to in the foregoing subsection, the
Cortes may process them as Government bills by means of the
urgency procedure.
Section 87
(1) Legislative initiative belongs to the Government, the Congress
and the Senate, in accordance with the Constitution and the Standing
Orders of the Houses.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 104, 105, 108, 109 and
140)
(2) The Assemblies of Self-governing Communities may request the
Government to adopt a bill or may refer a non-governmental bill to the
Bureau of Congress and delegate a maximum of three Assembly members to
defend it.
(3) An organic act shall lay down the manner and the requirements of
the popular initiative for submission of non-governmental bills. In any
case, no less than 500.000 authenticated signatures shall be required.
This initiative shall not be allowed on matters concerning organic acts,
taxation, international affairs or the prerogative of pardon.
Section 88
Government bills shall be approved by the Council of Ministers which
shall refer them to the Congress, attaching a statement setting forth the
necessary grounds and facts to reach a decision thereon.
Section 89
(1) The reading of non-governmental bills shall be regulated by the
Standing Orders of the Houses in such a way that the priority attached to
Government bills shall not prevent the exercise of the right to propose
legislation under the terms laid down in
section 87.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 105)
(2) Non-governmental bills which, in accordance with
section 87, are
taken under consideration in the Senate, shall be referred to the Congress
for reading.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 108)
Section 90
(1) Once an ordinary or organic bill has been passed by the
Congress, its Speaker shall inmediately report on it to the Speaker of the
Senate, who shall submit it to the latter for consideration.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 104)
(2) Within two months after receiving the text, the Senate may, by a
message stating the reasons for it, adopt a veto or approve amendments
thereto. The veto must be adopted by overall majority. The bill may not be
submitted to the King for assent unless, in the event of veto, the
Congress has ratified the initial text by overall majority or by single
majority if two months have elapsed since its introduction, or has reached
a decision as to the amendments, accepting them or not by single majority.
(Senate Standing Orders,
sections 106 and
122)
(3) The period of two months allowed to the Senate for vetoing or
amending a bill shall be reduced to twenty calendar days for bills
declared by the Government or by the Congress to be urgent.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 133-135)
Section 91
The King shall, within a period of fifteen days, give his assent to
bills drafted by the Cortes Generales, and shall promulgate them
and order their publication forthwith.
Section 92
(1) Political decisions of special importance may be submitted to
all citizens in a consultative referendum.
(2) The referendum shall be called by the King on the President of
the Government's proposal after previous authorization by the Congress.
(3) An organic act shall lay down the terms and procedures for the
different kinds of referendum provided for in this Constitution.
Section 93
Authorization may be granted by an organic act for concluding
treaties by which powers derived from the Constitution shall be
transferred to an international organization or institution. It is
incumbent on the Cortes Generales or the Government, as the case
may be, to ensure compliance with these treaties and with resolutions
originating in the international and supranational organizations to which
such powers have been so transferred.
Section 94
(1) The giving of the consent of the State to enter any commitment
by means of treaty or agreement, shall require prior authorization of the
Cortes Generales in the following cases:
a) Treaties of a political nature.
b) Treaties or agreements of a military nature.
c) Treaties or agreements affecting the territorial integrity of the
State or the fundamental rights and duties established under
Part 1.
d) Treaties or agreements which imply financial liabilities for the
Public Treasury.
e) Treaties or agreements which involve amendment or repeal of some
law or require legislative measures for their execution.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 144 and 145)
(2) The Congress and the Senate shall be informed forthwith of the
conclusion of any other treaties or agreements.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 146)
Section 95
(1) The conclusion of an international treaty containing
stipulations contrary to the Constitution shall require prior
constitutional amendment.
(2) The Government or either House may request the Constitutional
Court to declare whether or not such a contradiction exists.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 147)
Section 96
(1) Validly concluded international treaties, once officially
published in Spain, shall be part of the internal legal system. Their
provisions may only be repealed, amended or suspended in the manner
provided for in the treaties themselves or in accordance with the general
rules of international law.
(2) The procedure provided for in section
94 for entering into international treaties and agreements shall be
used for denouncing them.
Section 97
The Government shall conduct domestic and foreign policy, civil and
military administration and the defence of the State. It exercises
executive authority and the power of statutory regulations in accordance
with the Constitution and the laws.
Section 98
(1) The Government shall consist of the President, Vice-Presidents,
when appropiate, Ministers and other members as may be created by law.
(2) The President shall direct the Governments' action and
coordinate the functions of the other members thereof, without prejudice
to the competence and direct responsability of the latter in the discharge
of their duties.
(3) Members of the Government may not perform representative
functions other than those derived from their parliamentary mandate, nor
any other public function not deriving from their office, nor engage in
any professional or commercial activity whatsoever.
(4) The status and incompatibilities of members of the Government
shall be laid down by law.
Section 99
(1) After each renewal of the Congress and in the other cases
provided for under the Constitution, the King shall, after consultation
with the representatives appointed by the political groups with
parliamentary representation, and through the Speaker of the Congress,
nominate a candidate for the Presidency of the Government.
(2) The candidate nominated in accordance with the provisions of the
foregoing subsection shall submit to the Congress the political programme
of the Government he or she intends to form and shall seek the confidence
of the House.
(3) If the Congress, by vote of the overall majority of its members,
grants to said candidate its confidence, the King shall appoint him or her
President. If overall majority is not obtained, the same proposal shall be
submitted for a fresh vote forty-eight hours after the previous vote, and
confidence shall be deemed to have been secured if granted by single
majority.
(4) If, after this vote, confidence for the investiture has not been
obtained, successive proposals shall be voted upon in the manner provided
for in the foregoing paragraphs.
(5) If within two months of the first vote for investiture no
candidate has obtained the confidence of the Congress, the King shall
dissolve both Houses and call for new elections, with the countersignature
of the Speaker of the Congress.
Section 100
The other members of the Government shall be appointed and dismissed
by the King at the President's proposal.
Section 101
(1) The Government shall resign after the holding of general
elections, in the event of loss of parliamentary confidence as provided in
the Constitution, or on the resignation or death of the President.
(2) The outgoing Government shall continue as acting body until the
new Government takes office.
Section 102
(1) The President and other members of the Government shall be held
criminally liable, should the occasion arise, before the Criminal Section
of the Supreme Court.
(2) If the charge were treason or any offence against the security
of the State committed in the discharge of office, it may only be brought
against them on the initiative of one quarter of Members of Congress and
with the approval of the overall majority thereof.
(3) The Royal prerogative of pardon shall not apply any of the cases
provided for under the present section.
Section 103
(1) The Public Administration shall serve the general interest in a
spirit of objectivity and shall act in accordance with the principles of
efficiency, hierarchy, decentralization, deconcentration and coordination,
and in full subordination to the law.
(2) The organs of State Administration are set up, directed and
coordinated in accordance with the law.
(3) The law shall lay down the status of civil servants, the entry
into the civil service in accordance with the principles of merit and
ability, the special features of the exercise of their right to union
membership, the system of incompatibilities and the guarantees regarding
impartiality in the discharge of their duties.
Section 104
(1) The Security Forces and Corps serving under the Government shall
have the duty to protect the free exercise of rights and freedoms and to
guarantee the safety of citizens.
(2) An organic act shall specify the duties, basic principles of
action and statutes of the Security Forces and Corps.
Section 105
The law shall make provision for:
a) The hearing of citizens, directly, or through the organizations
and associations recognized by the law, in the process of drawing up the
administrative provisions which affect them.
b) The access of citizens to administrative files and records,
except to the extent that they may concern the security and defence of the
State, the investigation of crimes and the privacy of persons.
c) The procedures for the taking of administrative action, with due
safeguards for the hearing of interested parties when appropriate.
Section 106
(1) The Courts shall check the power to issue regulations and ensure
that the rule of law prevails in administrative action, and that the
latter is subordinated to the ends which justify it.
(2) Private individuals shall, under the terms laid down by law, be
entitled to compensation for any harm they may suffer in any of their
property and rights, except in cases of force majeure, whenever
such harm is the result of the operation of public services.
Section 107
The Council of State is the supreme consultative body of the
Government. An organic act shall make provision for its membership and its
terms of reference.
Section 108
The Government is jointly accountable before the Congress for its
conduct of political business.
Section 109
The Houses and their Committees may, through their respective
Speaker, request any kind of information and help they may need from the
Government and Government Departments and from any authorities of the
State and Self-governing Communities.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 66 and
67
Section 110
(1) The Houses and their Committees may summon members of the
Government.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 66)
(2) Members of the Government are entitled to attend meetings of the
Houses and their Committees and to be heard in them and may request that
officials from their Departments are allowed to report to them.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections
66.2 and
83.1)
Section 111
(1) The Government and each of its members are subject to
interpellations and questions put to them in the Houses. The Standing
Orders shall set aside a minimum weekly time for this type of debate.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 160-173)
(2) Any interpellation may give rise to a motion in which the House
states its position.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 173.2)
Section 112
The President of the Government, after deliberation by the Council
of Ministers, may ask the Congress for a vote of confidence in favour of
his or her programme or of a general policy statement. Confidence shall be
deemed to have been obtained when a single majority of the Members of
Congress vote in favour.
Section 113
(1) The Congress may require political responsibility from the
Government by adopting a motion of censure by overall majority of its
Members.
(2) The motion of censure must be proposed by at least one tenth of
the Members of Congress and shall include a candidate for the office of
the Presidency of the Government.
(3) The motion of censure may not be voted until five days after it
has been submitted. During the first two days of this period, alternative
motions may be submitted.
(4) If the motion of censure is not adopted by the Congress, its
signatories may not submit another during the same period of sessions.
Section 114
(1) If the Congress withholds its confidence from the Government,
the latter shall submit its resignation to the King, whereafter the
President of the Government shall be nominated in accordance with the
provisions of section
99.
(2) If the Congress adopts a motion of censure, the Government shall
submit its resignation to the King, and the candidate proposed in the
motion of censure shall be deemed to have the confidence of the House for
the purposes provided in section
99. The King shall appoint him or her President of the Government.
Section 115
(1) The President of the Government, after deliberation by the
Council of Ministers, and under his or her sole responsibility, may
propose the dissolution of the Congress, the Senate or the Cortes
Generales, which shall be proclaimed by the King. The decree of
dissolution shall set a date for the elections.
(2) The proposal for dissolution may not be submitted while a motion
of censure is pending.
(3) There shall be no further dissolution until a year has elapsed
since the previous one, except as provided for in
section 99, subsection
5.
Section 116
(1) An organic act shall make provision for the states of alarm,
emergency and siege (martial law) and the powers and restrictions attached
to each of them.
(2) A state of alarm shall be proclaimed by the Government, by means
of a decree agreed in Council of Ministers, for a maximum period of
fifteen days. The Congress shall be informed and must meet immediately,
and without its authorization the said period may not be extended. The
decree shall specify the territory to which the effects of the
proclamation apply.
(3) A state of emergency shall be proclaimed by the Government by
decree agreed in Council of Ministers, after prior authorization by the
Congress. The authorization for and proclamation of a state of emergency
must specifically state the effects thereof, the territory to which it is
to apply and its duration, which may not exceed thirty days, subject to
extension for a further thirty-day period, with the same requirements.
(4) A state of siege (martial law) shall be proclaimed by overall
majority of Congress solely on the Government's proposal. Congress shall
determine its territorial extension, duration and terms.
(5) The Congress may not be dissolved while any of the states
referred to in the present section remains in force, and if the Houses are
not in session, they shall be automatically convened. Their functioning,
as well as that of the other constitutional State authorities, may not be
interrupted while any of these states is in force. If, in the event that
the Congress has been dissolved or its term has expired, a situation
giving rise to any of these states should occur, the powers of the
Congress shall be assumed by its Permanent Deputation.
(6) Proclamation of states of alarm, emergency and siege shall not
affect the principle of liability of the Government or its agents as
recognized in the Constitution and the laws.
Section 117
(1) Justice emanates from the people and is administered on behalf
of the King by judges and magistrates members of the Judicial Power who
shall be independent, shall have fixity of tenure, shall be accountable
for their acts and subject only to the rule of law.
(2) Judges and magistrates may only be dismissed, suspended,
transferred or retired on the grounds and subject to the safeguards
provided for by the law.
(3) The exercise of judicial authority in any kind of action, both
in ruling and having judgments executed, is vested exclusively in the
courts and tribunals laid down by the law, in accordance with the rules of
jurisdiction and procedure which may be established therein.
(4) Judges and courts shall not exercise any powers other than those
indicated in the foregoing subsection and those which are expressly
allocated to them by law as a guarantee of any right.
(5) The principle of jurisdictional unity is the basis of the
organization and operation of the courts. The law shall make provision for
the exercise of military jurisdiction strictly within military framework
and in cases of state of siege (martial law), in accordance with the
principles of the Constitution.
(6) Courts of exception are prohibited.
Section 118
It is compulsory to comply with sentences and other final
resolutions of judges and courts, as well as to pay them such assistance
as they may require in the course of trials and for the execution of
judgments.
Section 119
Justice shall be free when thus provided for by law, and shall in
any case be so in respect of those who have insufficient means to sue in
court.
Section 120
(1) Judicial proceedings shall be public, with the exceptions
contemplated in the laws on procedure.
(2) Proceedings shall be predominantly oral, especially in criminal
cases.
(3) Judgments shall always specify the grounds therefore, and they
shall be delivered in a public hearing.
Section 121
Damages caused by judicial error as well as those arising from
irregularities in the administration of justice shall give rise to a right
to compensation by the State, in accordance with the law.
Section 122
(1) The Organic Act of the Judicial Power shall make provision for
the setting up, operation and internal administration of courts and
tribunals as well as for the legal status of professional judges and
magistrates, who shall form a single body, and of the staff serving in the
administration of justice.
(2) The General Council of the Judicial Power is its governing body.
An organic act shall lay down its status and the system of
incompatibilities applicable to its members and their functions,
especially in connection with appointments, promotions, inspection and the
disciplinary system.
(3) The General Council of the Judicial Power shall consist of the
President of the Supreme Court, who shall preside it, and of twenty
members appointed by the King for a five-year period, of which twelve
shall be judges and magistrates of all judicial categories, under the
terms provided for by the organic act; four nominated by the Congress and
four by the Senate, elected in both cases by three-fifths of their members
amongst lawyers and other jurists of acknowledged competence with more
than fifteen years of professional practice.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 184-186)
Section 123
(1) The Supreme Court, with jurisdiction over the whole of Spain, is
the highest judicial body in all branches of justice, except with regard
to provisions concerning constitutional guarantees.
(2) The President of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by the
King, on the General Council of the Judicial Power proposal in the manner
to be laid down by the law.
Section 124
(1) The Office of Public Prosecutor, without prejudice to functions
entrusted to other bodies, has the task of promoting the operation of
justice in the defence of the rule of law, of citizens' rights and of the
public interest as safeguarded by the law, whether ex officio or
at the request of interested parties, as well as that of protecting the
independence of the courts and securing before them the satisfaction of
social interest.
(2) The Office of Public Prosecutor shall discharge its duties
through its own bodies in accordance with the principles of unity of
operation and hierarchical subordination, subject in all cases to the
principles of the rule of law and of impartiality.
(3) The organic statute of the Office of the Public Prosecutor shall
be laid down by law.
(4) The State's Public Prosecutor shall be appointed by the King on
the Government's proposal after consultation with the General Council of
the Judicial Power.
Section 125
Citizens may engage in popular action and take part in the
administration of justice through the institution of the jury, in the
manner and with respect to those criminal trials as may be determined by
law, as well as in customary and traditional courts.
Section 126
The judicial police shall report to the judges, the courts and the
Public Prosecutor when discharging their duties of crime investigation and
the discovery and arrest of offenders, under the terms to be laid down by
the law.
Section 127
(1) Judges and magistrates as well as public prosecutors, whilst
actively in office, may not hold other public office nor belong to
political parties or unions. The law shall make provision for the system
and methods of professional association for judges, magistrates and
prosecutors.
(2) The law shall make provision for the system of incompatibilities
for members of the Judicial Power, which must ensure their total
independence.
Section 128
(1) The entire wealth of the country in its different forms,
irrespective of ownership, shall be subordinated to the general interest.
(2) Public initiative in economic activity is recognized. Essential
resources or services may be reserved by law to the public sector
especially in the case of monopolies. Likewise, State intervention in
companies may be imposed when the public interest so demands.
Section 129
(1) The law shall establish the forms of participation of the
persons concerned in Social Security and in the activities of those public
bodies whose operation directly affects quality of life or general
welfare.
(2) The public authorities shall efficiently promote the various
forms of participation in the enterprise and shall encourage cooperative
societies by means of appropriate legislation. They shall also establish
means to facilitate access by workers to ownership of the means of
production.
Section 130
(1) The public authorities shall promote the modernization and
development of all economic sectors and, in particular, of agriculture,
livestock raising, fishing and handicrafts, in order to bring the standard
of living of all Spaniards up to the same level.
(2) For the same purpose, special treatment shall be given to
mountain areas.
Section 131
(1) The State shall be empowered to plan general economic activity
by an act in order to meet collective needs, to balance and harmonize
regional and sectorial development and to stimulate the growth of income
and wealth and their more equitable distribution.
(2) The Government shall draft planning projects in accordance with
forecasts supplied by Self-governing Communities and with the advice and
cooperation of unions and other professional, employers' and financial
organizations. A council shall be set up for this purpose, whose
membership and duties shall be laid down by the law.
Section 132
(1) The law shall lay down the rules governing public and communal
property, on the basis that it shall be inalienable, exempt from
prescription and cannot be attached under any circumstances, and it shall
also provide for the case of disaffectation from public purpose.
(2) The goods of the State's public property shall be that
established by law and shall, in any case, include the foreshore beaches,
territorial waters and the natural resources of the exclusive economic
zone and the continental shelf.
(3) The State's Domain and the National Heritage, as well as their
administration, protection and preservation, shall be regulated by law.
Section 133
(1) The primary power to raise taxes is vested exclusively in the
State by means of law.
(2) Self-governing Communities and local Corporations may impose and
levy taxes, in accordance with the Constitution and the laws.
(3) Any fiscal benefit affecting State taxes must be established by
virtue of law.
(4) Public Administrations may only contract financial liabilities
and incur expenditures in accordance with the law.
Section 134
(1) It is incumbent upon the Government to draft the State Budget
and upon the Cortes Generales to examine, amend and adopt it.
(Senate Standing
Orders, sections 148-150)
(2) The State Budget shall be drafted annually and shall include the
entire expenditure and income of the State public sector and a specific
mention shall be made of the amount of the fiscal benefits affecting State
taxes.
(3) The Government must submit the draft State Budget to the
Congress at least three months before the expiration of that of the
previous year.
(4) If the Budget Bill is not passed before the first day of the
corresponding financial year, the Budget of the previous financial year
shall be automatically extended until the new one is approved.
(5) Once the Budget Bill has been adopted, the Government may submit
bills involving increases in public expenditure or decreases in the
revenue corresponding to the same financial year.
(6) Any non-governmental bill or amendment which involves an
increase in appropriations or a decrease in budget revenue shall require
previous approval by the Government before its passage.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 151)
(7) The Budget Act may not establish new taxes. It may modify them,
wherever a tax law of a substantive nature so provides.
Section 135
(1) The Government must be authorized by law in order to issue
Public Debt bonds or to contract loans.
(2) Loans to meet payment on the interest and capital of the State's
Public Debt shall always be deemed to be included in budget expenditure
and may not be subject to amendment or modification as long as they
conform to the terms of issue.
Section 136
(1) The Auditing Court is the supreme body charged with auditing the
State's accounts and financial management, as well as those of the public
sector.
It shall be directly accountable to the Cortes Generales and
shall discharge its duties by delegation of the same when examining and
verifying the General State Accounts.
(2) The State Accounts and those of the State's public sector shall
be submitted to the Auditing Court and shall be audited by the latter. The
Auditing Court, without prejudice to its own jurisdiction, shall send an
annual report to the Cortes Generales informing them, where
applicable, of any infringements that may, in its opinion, have been
committed, or any liabilities that may have been incurred.
(3) Members of the Auditing Court shall enjoy the same independence
and fixity of tenure and shall be subject to the same incompatibilities as
judges.
(4) An organic act shall make provision for membership, organization
and duties of the Auditing Court.
Section 137
The State is organized territorially into municipalities, provinces
and the Self-governing Communities that may be constituted. All these
bodies shall enjoy self-government for the management of their respective
interests.
Section 138
(1) The State guarantees the effective implementation of the
principle of solidarity proclaimed in
section 2 of the
Constitution, by endeavouring to establish a fair and adequate economic
balance between the different areas of the Spanish territory and taking
into special consideration the circumstances pertaining to those which are
islands.
(2) Differences between Statutes of the different Self-governing
Communities may in no case imply economic or social privileges.
Section 139
(1) All Spaniards have the same rights and obligations in any part
of the State territory.
(2) No authority may adopt measures which directly or indirectly
hinder freedom of movement and settlement of persons and free movement of
goods throughout the Spanish territory.
Section 140
The Constitution guarantees the autonomy of municipalities. These
shall enjoy full legal personality. Their government and administration
shall be vested in their Town Councils, consisting of Mayors and
councillors. Councillors shall be elected by residents of the municipality
by universal, equal, free, direct and secret suffrage, in the manner
provided for by the law. The Mayors shall be elected by the councillors or
by the residents. The law shall lay down the terms under which an open
council of all residents may proceed.
Section 141
(1) The province is a local entity, with its own legal personality,
arising from the grouping of municipalities, and a territorial division
designed to carry out the activities of the State. Any alteration of
provincial boundaries must be approved by the Cortes Generales
in an organic act.
(2) The government and autonomous administration of the provinces
shall be entrusted to Provincial Councils (Diputaciones) or
other Corporations that must be representative in character.
(3) Groups of municipalities other than provinces may be formed.
(4) In the archipelagos, each island shall also have its own
administration in the form of Cabildo or Insular Council.
Section 142
Local treasuries must have sufficient funds available in order to
perform the tasks assigned by law to the respective Corporations, and
shall mainly be financed by their own taxation as well as by their share
of State taxes and those of Self-governing Communities.
Self-governing Communities
Section 143
(1) In the exercise of the right to self-government recognized in
section 2 of the
Constitution, bordering provinces with common historic, cultural and
economic characteristics, insular territories and provinces with a
historic regional status may accede to self-government and form
Self-governing Communities (Comunidades Autónomas) in
conformity with the provisions contained in this Part and in the
respective Statutes.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 143)
(2) The right to initiate the process towards self-government lies
with all the Provincial Councils concerned or with the corresponding
inter-island body and with two thirds of the municipalities whose
population represents at least the majority of the electorate of each
province or island. These requirements must be met within six months from
the initial agreement reached to this aim by any of the local Corporations
concerned.
(3) If this initiative is not successful, it may be repeated only
after five years have elapsed.
Section 144
The Cortes Generales may, in the national interest, and by
an organic act:
a) Authorize the setting-up of a Self-governing Community, where its
territory does not exceed that of a province and does not possess the
characteristics outlined in
section 143, paragraph
1.
b) Authorize or grant, as the case may be, a Statute of Autonomy to
territories which are not integrated into the provincial organization.
c) Take over the initiative of the local Corporations referred to in
section 143, paragraph
2.
Section 145
(1) Under no circumstances shall a federation of Self-governing
Communities be allowed.
(2) Statutes of Autonomy may provide for the circumstances,
requirements and terms under which Self-governing Communities may reach
agreements among themselves for the management and rendering of services
in matters pertaining to them, as well as for the nature and effects of
the corresponding notification to be sent to the Cortes Generales.
In all other cases, cooperation agreements among Self-governing
Communities shall require authorization by the Cortes Generales.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections
56 c and d, and 137-139)
Section 146
The draft Statute of Autonomy shall be drawn up by an assembly
consisting of members of the Provincial Council or inter-island body of
the provinces concerned, and the respective Members of Congress and
Senators elected in them, and shall be sent to the Cortes Generales
for its drafting as an Act.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 143)
Section 147
(1) Within the terms of the present Constitution, Statutes of
Autonomy shall be the basic institutional rule of each Self-governing
Community and the State shall recognize and protect them as an integral
part of its legal system.
(2) The Statutes of Autonomy must contain:
a) The name of the Community which best corresponds to its historic
identity.
b) Its territorial boundaries.
c) The name, organization and seat of its own autonomous
institutions.
d) The powers assumed within the framework laid down by the
Constitution and the basic rules for the transfer of the corresponding
services.
(3) Amendment of Statutes of Autonomy shall conform to the procedure
established therein and shall in any case require approval of the Cortes
Generales through an organic act.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 143)
Section 148
(1) The Self-governing Communities may assume competences over the
following matters:
i) Organization of their institutions of self-government.
ii) Changes in municipal boundaries within their territory and, in
general, functions appertaining to the State Administration regarding
local Corporations, whose transfer may be authorized by legislation on
local governement.
iii) Town and country planning and housing.
iv) Public works of interest to the Self-governing Community, within
its own territory.
v) Railways and roads whose routes lie exclusively within the
territory of the Selfgoverning Community and transport by the above means
or by cable fulfilling the same conditions.
vi) Ports of haven, recreational ports and airports and, in general,
those which are not engaged in commercial activities.
vii) Agriculture and livestock raising, in accordance with general
economic planning.
viii) Woodlands and forestry.
ix) Management of environmental protection.
x) Planning, construction and exploitation of hydraulic projects,
canals and irrigation of interest to the Self-governing Community; mineral
and thermal waters.
xi) Inland water fishing, shellfish industry and fishfarming,
hunting and river fishing.
xii) Local fairs.
xiii) Promotion of economic development of the Self-governing
Community within the objectives set by national economic policy.
xiv) Handicrafts.
xv) Museums, libraries and music conservatories of interest to the
Self-governing Community.
xvi) The Self-governing Community's monuments of interest.
xvii) The promotion of culture and research and, where applicable,
the teaching of the Self-governing Community's language.
xviii) The promotion and planning of tourism within its territorial
area.
xix) The promotion of sports and the proper use of leisure.
xx) Social assistance.
xxi) Health and hygiene.
xxii) The supervision and protection of its buildings and
installations. Coordination and other powers relating to local police
forces under the terms to be laid down by an organic act.
(2) After five years, the Self-governing Communities may, by
amendment of their Statutes of Autonomy, progressively enlarge their
powers within the framework laid down in
section 149.
Section 149
(1) The State shall have exclusive competence over the following
matters:
i) Regulation of basic conditions guaranteeing the equality of all
Spaniards in the exercise of their rights and in the fulfilment of their
constitutional duties.
ii) Nationality, immigration, emigration, status of aliens, and
right of asylum.
iii) International relations.
iv) Defence and the Armed Forces.
v) Administration of Justice.
vi) Commercial, criminal and penitentiary legislation; procedural
legislation, without prejudice to the necessary specialities in these
fields arising from the peculiar features of the substantive law of the
Self-governing Communities.
vii) Labour legislation, without prejudice to its execution by
bodies of the Self-governing Communities.
viii) Civil legislation, without prejudice to the preservation,
modification and development by the Self-governing Communities of their
civil law, foral or special, whenever these exist, and
traditional charts. In any event rules for the application and
effectiveness of legal provisions, civil relations arising from the forms
of marriage, keeping of records and drawing up to public instruments,
bases of contractual liability, rules for resolving conflicts of law and
determination of the sources of law in conformity, in this last case, with
the rules of traditional charts or with those of foral or
special laws.
ix) Legislation on copyright and industrial property.
x) Customs and tariff regulations; foreign trade.
xi) Monetary system: foreign currency, exchange and convertibility;
bases for the regulations concerning credit, banking and insurance.
xii) Legislation on weights and measures and determination of the
official time.
xiii) Basic rules and coordination of general economic planning.
xiv) General financial affairs and State Debt.
xv) Promotion and general coordination of scientific and technical
research.
xvi) External health measures; basic conditions and general
coordination of health matters; legislation on pharmaceutical products.
xvii) Basic legislation and financial system of Social Security,
without prejudice to implementation of its services by the Self-governing
Communities.
xviii) Basic rules of the legal system of Public Administrations and
the status of their officials which shall, in any case, guarantee that all
persons under said administrations will receive equal treatment; the
common administrative procedure, without prejudice to the special features
of the Self-governing Communities' own organizations; legislation on
compulsory expropriation; basic legislation on contracts and
administrative concessions and the system of liability of all Public
Administrations.
xix) Sea fishing, without prejudice to the powers which, in
regulations governing this sector, may be vested to the Self-governing
Communities.
xx) Merchant navy and registering of ships; lighting of coasts and
signals at sea; general-interest ports; general-interest airports; control
of the air space, air traffic and transport; meteorological services and
aircraft registration.
xxi) Railways and land transport crossing through the territory of
more than one Self-governing Community; general system of communications;
motor vehicle traffic; Post Office services and telecommunications; air
and underwater cables and radiocommunications.
xxii) Legislation, regulation and concession of hydraulic resources
and development where the water-streams flow through more than one
Self-governing Community, and authorization for hydro-electrical power
plants whenever their operation affects other Communities or the lines of
energy transportation are extended over other Communities.
xxiii) Basic legislation on environmental protection, without
prejudice to powers of the Self-governing Communities to take additional
protective measures; basic legislation on woodlands, forestry and cattle
trails.
xxiv) Public works of general benefit or whose execution affects
more than one Self-governing Community.
xxv) Basic regulation of mining and energy.
xxvi) Manufacturing, sale, possession and use of arms and
explosives.
xxvii) Basic rules relating to organization of the press, radio and
television and, in general, all mass-communications media without
prejudice to powers vested in the Self-governing Communities for their
development and implementation.
xxviii) Protection of Spain's cultural and artistic heritage and
national monuments against exportation and spoliation; museums, libraries,
and archives belonging to the State, without prejudice to their management
by the Self-governing Communities.
xxix) Public safety, without prejudice to the possibility of
creation of police forces by the Self-governing Communities, in the manner
to be provided for in their respective Statutes of Autonomy and within the
framework to be laid down by an organic act.
xxx) Regulation of the requirements for obtention, issue and
standardization of academic degrees and professional qualifications and
basic rules for implementation of
section 27 of the
Constitution, in order to guarantee the fulfilment of the duties of public
authorities in this matter.
xxxi) Statistics for State purposes.
xxxii) Authorization of popular consultations through the holding of
referendums.
(2) Without prejudice to the competences that may be assumed by the
Self-governing Communities, the State shall consider the promotion of
culture a duty and an essential function and shall facilitate cultural
communication among the Self-governing Communities, in cooperation with
them.
(3) Matters not expressly assigned to the State by this Constitution
may fall under the jurisdiction of the Self-governing Communities by
virtue of their Statutes of Autonomy. Jurisdiction on matters not claimed
by Statutes of Autonomy shall fall with the State, whose laws shall
prevail, in case of conflict, over those of the Self-governing Communities
regarding all matters in which exclusive jurisdiction has not been
conferred upon the latter. State law shall in any case be suppletory of
that of the Self-governing Communities.
Section 150
(1) The Cortes Generales, in matters of State
jurisdiction, may confer upon all or any of the Self-governing Communities
the power to pass legislation for themselves within the framework of the
principles, bases and guidelines laid down by a State act. Without
prejudice to the jurisdiction of the Courts, each enabling act shall make
provision for the method of supervision by the Cortes Generales over
the Communities' legislation.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 56 j)
(2) The State may transfer or delegate to the Self-governing
Communities, through an organic act, some of its powers which by their
very nature can be transferred or delegated. The law shall, in each case,
provide for the appropriate transfer of financial means, as well as
specify the forms of control to be retained by the State.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 56 k)
(3) The State may enact laws laying down the necessary principles
for harmonizing the rule-making provisions of the Self-governing
Communities, even in the case of matters over which jurisdiction has been
vested to the latter, where this is necessary in the general interest. It
is incumbent upon the Cortes Generales, by overall majority of
the members of each House, to evaluate this necessity.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections
56 l), 141
and 142)
Section 151
(1) It shall not be necessary to wait for the
five-year period referred to in
section 148,
subsection 2, to elapse when the initiative for the autonomy process
is agreed upon within the time limit specified in
section 143,
subsection 2, not only by the corresponding Provincial Councils or
inter-island bodies but also by three-quarters of the municipalities of
each province concerned, representing at least the majority of the
electorate of each one, and said initiative is ratified in a referendum by
the overall majority of electors in each province, under the terms to be
laid down by an organic act.
(2) In the case referred to in the foregoing paragraph, procedure
for drafting the Statute of Autonomy shall be as follows:
i) The Government shall convene all Members of Congress and Senators
elected in the constituencies of the territory seeking self-government, in
order that they may set themselves up as an Assembly for the sole purpose
of drawing up a Statute of Autonomy, to be adopted by the overall majority
of its members.
ii) Once the draft Statute has been passed by the Parliamentarians'
Assembly, it is to be sent to the Constitutional Committee of the Congress
which shall examine it within two months with the cooperation and
assistance of a delegation from the Assembly which has proposed it, in
order to decide by common agreement upon its final form.
iii) If such agreement is reached, the resulting text shall be
submitted in a referendum to the electorate in the provinces within the
territory to be covered by the proposed Statute.
iv) If the draft Statute is approved in each province by the
majority of validly cast votes, it shall be referred to the Cortes
Generales. Each House, in plenary sitting, shall decide upon the text
by means of a vote of ratification. Once the Statute been passed, the King
shall give his assent and promulgate it as an act.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 143.2)
v) If the agreement referred to in paragraph ii) of this subsection
is not reached, the legislative process for the draft Statute in the Cortes
Generales shall be the same as that for a bill. The text passed by
the latter shall be submitted to a referendum of the electorate of the
provinces within the territory to be covered by the draft Statute. In the
event that it is approved by the majority of validly cast votes in each
province, it shall be promulgated as provided in the foregoing paragraph.
(3) In the cases described in paragraphs iv) and v) of the foregoing
subsection, failure by one or several of the provinces to ratify the draft
Statute shall not prevent constitution of the remaining provinces into a
Self-governing Community in the manner to be provided for by the organic
act contemplated in subsection 1 of this section.
Section 152
(1) In the case of Statutes passed by means of
the procedure referred to in the foregoing
section, the institutional self-government organization shall be
based on a Legislative Assembly elected by universal suffrage under a
system of proportional representation which shall also assure the
representation of the various areas of the territory; an Executive Council
with executive and administrative functions and a President elected by the
Assembly among its members and appointed by the King. The President shall
assume leadership of the Executive Council, the supreme representation of
the Community and the State's ordinary representation in the latter. The
President and the members of the Executive Council shall be politically
accountable to the Assembly.
A High Court of Justice, without prejudice to the jurisdiction of
the Supreme Court, shall be the head of Judicial Power in the territory of
the Self-governing Community. The Statutes of Autonomy may make provision
for the circumstances and the manner in which the Community is to take
part in the setting-up of the judicial districts of the territory.
Provided that they must conform to the provisions of the Organic Act on
the Judicial Power and to the principles of unity and independence of the
judicial power.
Without prejudice to the provisions of
section 123,
successive proceedings, if any, shall be held before judicial bodies
located in the same territory of the Self-governing Community in which the
Court having jurisdiction in the first instance is located.
(2) Once the Statutes have received the Royal Assent and been
promulgated, they may be amended only by the procedure provided for
therein and a referendum of registered electors in the Self-governing
Community.
(3) By grouping bordering municipalities together, the Statutes may
set up their own territorial constituencies which shall enjoy full legal
personality.
Section 153
Control over the bodies of the Self-governing Communities shall be
exercised by:
a) The Constitutional Court, in matters pertaining to the
constitutionality of their regulatory provisions having the force of law.
b) The Government, after the handing down by the Council of State of
its opinion, regarding the exercise of delegated functions referred to in
section 150,
subsection 2.
c) Jurisdictional bodies of administrative litigation with regard to
autonomic administration and its regulations.
d) The Auditing Court, with regard to financial and budgetary
matters.
Section 154
A delegate appointed by the Government shall be responsible for the
State administration in the territory of each Self-governing Community and
shall coordinate it, when necessary, with the Community's own
administration.
Section 155
(1) If a Self-governing Community does not fulfil the obligations
imposed upon it by the Constitution or other laws, or acts in a way that
is seriously prejudicial to the general interest of Spain, the Government,
after having lodged a complaint with the President of the Self-governing
Community and failed to receive satisfaction therefore, may, following
approval granted by the overall majority of the Senate, take all measures
necessary to compel the Community to meet said obligations, or to protect
the above-mentioned general interest.
(Senate Standing Orders,
sections 56 m and
189)
(2) With a view to implementing the measures provided for in the
foregoing paragraph, the Government may issue instructions to all the
authorities of the Self-governing Communities.
Section 156
(1) The Self-governing Communities shall enjoy financial autonomy
for the development and exercise of their powers, in conformity with the
principles of coordination with the State Treasury and solidarity among
all Spaniards.
(2) The Self-governing Communities may act as delegates or agents of
the State for the collection, management and assessment of the latter's
tax resources, in conformity with the law and their Statutes.
Section 157
(1) The resources of the Self-governing Communities shall consist
of:
a) Taxes wholly or partially made over to them by the State;
surcharges on State taxes and other shares in State revenue.
b) Their own taxes, rates and special levies.
c) Transfers from an inter-territorial compensation fund and other
allocations to be charged to the State Budget.
d) Revenues accruing from their property and private law income.
e) Interest from loan operations.
(2) The Self-governing Communities may under no circumstances
introduce measures to raise taxes on property located outside their
territory or likely to hinder the free movement of goods or services.
(3) Exercise of the financial powers set out in subsection 1 above,
rules for settling the conflicts which may arise, and possible forms of
financial cooperation between the Self-governing Communities and the State
may be laid down by an organic act.
Section 158
(1) An allocation may be made in the State Budget to the
Self-governing Communities in proportion to the amount of State services
and activities for which they have assumed responsibility and to guarantee
a minimum level of basic public services throughout Spanish territory.
(2) With the aim of redressing interterritorial economic imbalances
and implementing the principle of solidarity, a compensation fund shall be
set up for investment expenditure, the resources of which shall be
distributed by the Cortes Generales among the Self-governing
Communities and provinces, as the case may be.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 56 ñ
and 140)
Section 159
(1) The Constitutional Court shall consist of twelve members
appointed by the King. Of these, four shall be nominated by the Congress
by a majority of three-fifths of its members, four shall be nominated by
the Senate with the same majority, two shall be nominated by the
Government, and two by the General Council of the Judicial Power.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 184-186)
(2) Members of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed among
magistrates and prosecutors, university professors, public officials and
lawyers, all of whom must have a recognized standing with at least fifteen
years' practice in their profession.
(3) Members of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed for a
period of nine years and shall be renewed by thirds every three years.
(4) Membership of the Constitutional Court is incompatible with any
position of a representative nature, any political or administrative
office, a management position in a political party or a trade union as
well as any employment in their service, active service as a judge or
prosecutor and any professional or business activity whatsoever.
Incompatibilities for members of the Judicial Power shall also apply
to members of the Constitutional Court.
(5) Members of the Constitutional Court shall be independent and
enjoy fixity of tenure during their term of office.
Section 160
The President of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed by the
King among its members, on the proposal of the full Court itself, for a
term of three years.
Section 161
(1) The Constitutional Court has jurisdiction over the whole Spanish
territory and is entitled to hear:
a) Appeals against the alleged unconstitutionality of acts and
statutes having the force of an act. A declaration of unconstitutionality
of a legal provision having the force of an act and that has already been
applied by the Courts, shall also affect the case-law doctrine built up by
the latter, but the decisions handed down shall not lose their status of
res judicata.
b) Individual appeals for protection (recursos de amparo) against
violation of the rights and freedoms contained in
section 53(2) of the Constitution, in the
circumstances and manner to be laid down by law.
c) Conflicts of jurisdiction between the State and the
Self-governing Communities or between the Self-governing Communities
themselves.
d) Other matters assigned to it by the Constitution or by organic
acts.
(2) The Government may appeal to the Constitutional Court against
provisions and resolutions adopted by the bodies of the Self-governing
Communities, which shall bring about the suspension of the contested
provisions or resolutions, but the Court must either ratify or lift the
suspension, as the case may be, within a period of not more than five
months.
Section 162
(1) The following are entitled to:
a) Lodge an appeal of unconstitutionality: the President of the
Government, the Defender of the People, fifty Members of Congress, fifty
Senators, the Executive body of a Self-governing Community and, where
applicable, its Assembly.
b) Lodge an individual appeal for protection (recurso de
amparo): any individual or body corporate with a legitimate interest,
as well as the Defender of the People and the Public Prosecutor's Office.
(2) In all other cases, the organic act shall determine which
persons and bodies shall have right of appeal to the Court.
Section 163
If a judicial body considers, when hearing a case, that a regulation
having the force of an act which is applicable thereto and upon the
validity of which the judgment depends, might be contrary to the
Constitution, it may bring the matter before the Constitutional Court in
the circumstances, manner and subject to the consequences to be laid down
by law, which shall in no case have a suspensive effect.
Section 164
(1) The judgments of the Constitutional Court shall be published in
the Official State Gazette (Boletín Oficial del Estado), with
the dissenting opinions, if any. They have the force of res judicata
from the day following their publication, and no appeal may be
brought against them. Those declaring the unconstitutionality of an act or
of a statute with the force of an act and all those which are not limited
to the acknowledgment of an individual right, shall be fully binding on
all persons.
(2) Unless the judgment rules otherwise, the part of the act not
affected by unconstitutionality shall remain in force.
Section 165
An organic act shall make provision for the functioning of the
Constitutional Court, the status of its members, the procedure to be
followed before it, and the conditions governing actions brought before
it.
Section 166
The right to propose a constitutional amendment shall be exercised
under the provisions of section
87, subsections 1 and 2.
(Senate
Standing Orders, sections 152-153)
Section 167
(1) Bills on constitutional amendments must be approved by a
majority of three-fifths of members of each House. If there is no
agreement between the Houses, an effort to reach it shall be made by
setting up a Joint Committee of an equal number of Members of Congress and
Senators which shall submit a text to be voted on by the Congress and the
Senate.
(Senate Standing Orders, sections 57,
154, 155
and
156.1 and 2)
(2) If approval is not obtained by means of the procedure outlined
in the foregoing subsection, and provided that the text has been passed by
the overall majority of the members of the Senate, the Congress may pass
the amendment by a two-thirds vote in favour.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 156.3 and 4)
(3) Once the amendment has been passed by the Cortes Generales,
it shall be submitted to ratification by referendum, if so requested
by one tenth of the members of either House within fifteen days after its
passage.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 157)
Section 168
(1) If a total revision of the Constitution is
proposed, or a partial revision thereof, affecting the
Preliminary Title,
Chapter II, Division
1 of Part I, or Part
II, the principle of the proposed reform shall be approved by a
two-thirds majority of the members of each House, and the Cortes
Generales shall immediately be dissolved.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 158)
(2) The Houses elected thereupon must ratify the decision and
proceed to examine the new constitutional text, which must be passed by a
two-thirds majority of the members of each House.
(Senate
Standing Orders, section 159)
(3) Once the amendment has been passed by the Cortes Generales,
it shall be submitted to ratification by referendum.
Section 169
The process of constitutional amendment may not
be initiated in time of war or under any of the states contemplated in
section 116.
One
The Constitution protects and respects the historic rights of the
territories with traditional charts (fueros).
The general updating of historic rights shall be carried
out, where appropriate, within the framework of the Constitution and of
the Statutes of Autonomy.
Two
The provision of section
12 of this Constitution regarding the coming of age, shall not be
prejudicial to cases in which traditional charts are applicable within the
sphere of private law.
Three
Any change in the financial and tax system of the Canary Islands
shall require a previous report from the Self-governing Community or, as
the case may be, from the provisional self-government body.
Four
In Self-governing Communities where more than one Court of Appeal
(Audiencia Territorial) holds jurisdiction, the Statutes of
Autonomy may maintain the existing Courts and share out jurisdiction among
them, provided this is done in accordance with the provisions of the
Organic Act on the Judicial Power and in conformity with the unity and
independence of the latter.
One
In territories with a provisional self-government regime, their
higher corporate bodies may, by means of a resolution adopted by the
overall majority of their members, assume for themselves the initiative
for autonomy which section
143, subsection 2, confers upon the Provincial Councils or
corresponding inter-island bodies.
Two
The territories which in the past have, by plebiscite, approved
draft Statutes of Autonomy and which at the time of the promulgation of
this Constitution, have provisional self-government regimes, may proceed
immediately in the manner contemplated in
section 148,
subsection 2, if agreement to do so is reached by the overall
majority of their pre self-government higher corporate bodies, and the
Government shall be duly informed. The draft Statutes shall be drawn up in
accordance with the provisions of
section 151,
subsection 2, where so requested by the pre Self-government
assembly.
(Senate Standing Orders, section 143)
Three
The right to initiate the process towards self-government conferred
on local authorities or their members, provided in
section 143,
subsection 2, shall be postponed for all purposes until the first
local elections have taken place, once the Constitution has come into
force.
Four
(1) In the case of Navarra, and for the purpose of its integration
into the General Basque Council or into the autonomous Basque institutions
which may replace it, the procedure contemplated by
section 143 of
this Constitution shall not apply. The initiative shall lie instead with
the appropriate historic institution (órgano foral),
whose decision must be taken by the majority of its members. The
initiative shall further require for its validity the ratification by a
referendum expressly held to this end and approval by the majority of
votes validly cast.
(2) If the initiative does not succeed, it may only be repeated
during a further term of office of the competent Foral body and,
in any case, after the minimum period laid down in
section 143 has
elapsed.
Five
The cities of Ceuta and Melilla may set themselves up as
Self-governing Communities if their respective City Councils so decide in
a resolution adopted by the overall majority of their members and if the
Cortes Generales so authorize them by an organic act, under
section 144.
Six
Where several draft Statutes are referred to the Constitutional
Committee of the Congress, they shall be considered in the order in which
they are received. The two month period referred to in
section 151 shall
be counted from the moment in which the Committee completes its study of
the draft or of the drafts that it has successively examined.
Seven
The provisional self-government bodies shall be considered to be
dissolved in the following cases:
a) Once the bodies provided for by the Statutes of Autonomy passed
in conformity with the Constitution have been set up.
b) In the event that the initiative for the obtention of autonomy
status should not be successful for non-compliance with the requirements
of section 143.
c) If the relevant body has not exercised the right recognized in
the First Transitional Provision within a period of three years.
Eight
(1) Once the present Constitution has come into force, the Houses
that have adopted it shall assume the functions and powers set out therein
for the Congress and the Senate respectively. Provided that under no
circumstances shall their term of office continue beyond June 15, 1981.
(2) With regard to the provisions of
section 99, the
promulgation of the Constitution shall be considered as creating the
constitutional basis for the subsequent application of those provisions.
To this end, there shall be a thirty day period, as from the date of the
promulgation, for implementing the provisions contained in said section.
During this period, the current President of the Government assuming
the functions and powers vested by the Constitution for this office, may
decide to use the authority conferred by
section 115 or,
through resignation, leave the way open for application of
section 99. In the
latter case, the situation as regards the President shall be that provided
in subsection 2 of
section 101.
(3) In the event of dissolution, in accordance with
section 115, and
if the provisions contained in
sections 68 and
69 have not been
enacted, the rules previously in force shall apply to the ensueing
elections, except for causes of ineligibility and incompatibilities, to
which section 70,
subsection 1, paragraph b), of this Constitution shall be directly
applicable, as well as its provisions concerning voting age and those of
ection 69, subsection 3.
Nine
Three years after the election of the members of the Constitutional
Court of the first tie, lots shall be drawn to choose a group of four
members of the same electoral origin who are to resign and be replaced.
The two members appointed following proposal by the Government and the two
appointed following proposal by the General Council of the Judicial Power
shall be considered as members of the same electoral origin exclusively
for this purpose. After three years have elapsed, the same procedure shall
be carried out with regard to the two groups not affected by the
aforementioned drawing of lots. Thereafter, the provisions contained in
subsection 3 of
section 159 shall apply.
(1) Act 1/1977, of January 4, for Political Reform, is hereby
repealed, as well as the following, in so far as they were not already
repealed by the above-mentioned Act: the Act of the Fundamental Principles
of National Movement of May 17, 1958; the Chart of the Spanish People
(Fuero de los Españoles) of July 17, 1945; the Labour
Chart of March 9, 1938; the Act of Constitution of the Cortes of
July 17, 1942; the Act of Succession to the Head of State of July 26,
1947, all of them as amended by the Organic Act of the State of January
10, 1967. The last mentioned Act and that of the National Referendum of
October 22, 1945, are likewise repealed.
(2) To the extent that it may still retain some validity, the Act of
October 25, 1839 shall be definitively repealed in so far as it applies to
the provinces of Alava, Guipúzcoa and Vizcaya.
Subject to the same terms, the Act of July 21, 1876 shall be deemed
to be definitively repealed.
(3) Likewise, any provisions contrary to those contained in the
Constitution are hereby repealed.
This Constitution shall come into force on the day of publication of
its official text in the Official State Gazette (Boletín
Oficial del Estado). It shall also be published in the other
languages of Spain.
WHEREFORE, WE ORDER ALL SPANIARDS, WHETHER INDIVIDUALS OR AUTHORITIES, OT ABIDE BY THIS CONSTITUTION AND ENSURE THAT IT IS OBSERVED AS A FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF THE STATE.
PALACIO DE LAS CORTES, THE TWENTY-SEVENTH OF DECEMBER OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-EIGHT.
| THE PRESIDENT OF THE CORTES | THE SPEAKER OF THE CONGRESS | THE SPEAKER OF THE SENATE |
| Antonio Hernández Gil | Fernando Álvarez de Miranda y Torres | Antonio Fontán Pérez |