Under the
1873 Republic proclamation, the Spanish conceived in the
1869 Constitution were reassembled as a National Assembly in a
joint session of both the
Congress of Deputies and the
Senate. The electoral and procedural rules of the
Democratic Sexennium remained in force with amendments, including the Senate's abolition and the Congress's conversion into a
constituent assembly.
Date Election day was held over several voting days: the first was used to elect
polling station officials, and the remaining ones were devoted to the parliamentary election itself. The election to the Constituent was officially called on 11 March 1873, with the corresponding
decree setting election day for between 10 and 13 May. In
Cuba, elections were indefinitely postponed due to the
Ten Years' War. In
Puerto Rico, voting was based on
censitary suffrage, comprising Spanish males of
voting age who were either
literate or
taxpayers for any
direct tax, barring
freedmen without political rights. Additional restrictions excluded those deprived of political rights or barred from public office by a final
sentence, criminally
imprisoned (without
bail) or
convicted, and
homeless. The Constituent had one seat per 40,000 inhabitants or fraction above 20,000. All were elected in
single-member districts using
plurality voting and distributed among the
provinces of Spain according to population. Cuba and Puerto Rico were allocated 18 and 15 seats, respectively. As a result of the aforementioned allocation, 424 single-member districts were established. The law provided for
by-elections to fill
vacant seats during the legislative term. ==Candidates==