Prime Minister of Spain
President ofthe Government of Spain
Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Spain Incumbent:
José Luis Rodríguez ZapateroInauguralFrancisco de Paula Martinez de la RosaFormation 1820 Website www.la-moncloa.es
The President of the Government of Spain (Spanish: Presidente del Gobierno), sometimes referred to in English as the Prime Minister of Spain, is the Spanish head of government. The President of the Government is elected by the Congress of Deputies (the lower house of parliament) on being proposed by the King (this step is a mere formality). The current office is established under the Constitution of 1978. It is presently occupied by José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero.
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Official title
The Spanish head of government is known, in Spanish, as the Presidente del Gobierno. Literally translated, title is "President of the Government" or alternatively "Chairman of the Government",[1] but nevertheless the office-holder is commonly referred to in English as the "prime minister": the usual term for the head of government in a constitutional monarchy. However the Spanish for 'prime minister' is primer ministro; thus, for example, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is the Primer Ministro del Reino Unido, not the Presidente del Gobierno.
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In Spain the President of the Government is often called simply Presidente, meaning 'President'. More than once this has caused embarrassing errors among foreign authorities, such as mistaking Spain for a republic. For example Jeb Bush, the Governor of Florida, mistakenly referred to the head of government as the "President of the Spanish Republic" during a visit to Spain in 2003 [1].
The custom to name the head of government as "President" dates back from the reign of Isabella II of Spain, when the Prime Minister was called Presidente del Consejo de Ministros ("President of the Cabinet"). Before 1833 the figure was known as Secretario de Estado ("Secretary of State"), a denomination used today for junior ministers.
Election
The President of the Government is not directly elected by the people but indirectly elected by the legislature. Legislative elections take place at most every four years, but snap elections are not unknown in Spain: though unused in the last three terms, ex-PM Felipe González invoked his constitutional right to dissolve the Cortes three times in 1989, 1993 and 1996. Once the new Cortes have been assembled, the Speaker of the Congress of Deputies, the only house whose confidence a candidate must legally acquire, starts a round of contacts with the represented parties in order to find the most viable candidate. This has, as of 2008, always been the leader of the party that won the general election, but there is no legal requirement for this: though it has never happened in the national government, the party winning the election could end up not ruling if its rivals can gather a majority.
Once a viable candidate has been found, the Speaker formally requests the King to propose him or her to Congress, and a two-day long investiture debate takes place in which the candidate can explain his or her government objectives and priorities, followed by two rounds of debate with the parliamentary groups. At the moment of the vote, the House confidence is awarded if the candidate receives a majority of votes in the first poll (currently 176 out of 350 MPs), but if the confidence is not awarded, a second vote is scheduled two days later in which a simple plurality (i.e. more "yes" than "no" votes) is required. Once the candidate has achieved the support of the Congress, the Speaker notifies the King, who officially appoints the candidate as President of the Government. He or she is then free to conform the Cabinet and request the necessary appointments from the King.
The role of the Crown in all the process is purely ceremonial, even in the actual steps of appointing the candidate to the office, or appointing members of the Cabined, since all acts of the Spanish monarch must be vetted by the PM himself or, in case of an election or vacancy in the office, the Speaker of the Congress of Deputies. There is no provision whatsoever in the Spanish Constitutions or laws for granting any emergency powers to the monarch, which could be understood as exorcizing the ghost of the recent dictatorship in Spain.
Recent Spanish PMs
This is a list of the people who have held the office of Prime Minister since the Spanish transition to democracy. For the full list since the predecessor office of Secretary of the Universal Bureau was created (1705), see List of Prime Ministers of Spain.
King Juan Carlos ILeopoldo Calvo Sotelo y Bustelo
Actinguntil February 25 January 29, 1981December 2, 1982Felipe González Márquez
4 terms: 1982, 1986, 1989 and 1993 December 2, 1982May 5, 1996PSOEJosé María Aznar López
2 terms: 1996 and 2000 May 5, 1996April 17, 2004PPJosé Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
2 terms: 2004 and 2008 April 17, 2004Incumbent
Term expires: 2012 PSOE
See also
- History of Spain
- Politics of Spain
- List of Presidents of the Government (Spain)
- List of Spanish monarchs
References
- ^ The Oxford Spanish Dictionary and Grammar, ed. C.Lea et al., 2nd ed.(2001)
1 Entirely in Southwest Asia; included here because of cultural, political and historical association with Europe. 2 Partially or entirely in Asia, depending on the definition of the border between Europe and Asia.
3 Mostly in Asia.Link former page on this page
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