Under the
1876 Constitution, the Spanish were conceived as "co-legislative bodies", forming a nearly
perfect bicameral system. Both the
Congress of Deputies and the
Senate exercised legislative, oversight and budgetary functions, sharing almost equal powers, except in
budget laws (
taxation and
public credit)—whose
first reading corresponded to Congress—and in
impeachment processes against
government ministers, where Congress handled
indictment and the Senate the
trial.
Date The term of each chamber of the —the Congress and one-half of the elective part of the Senate—expired five years from the date of their previous election, unless they were
dissolved earlier. The
previous elections were held on 16 April 1899 for the Congress and on 30 April 1899 for the Senate, which meant that the chambers' terms would have expired on 16 and 30 April 1904, respectively. The
monarch had the prerogative to dissolve both chambers at any given time—either jointly or separately—and call a
snap election. There was no constitutional requirement for concurrent elections to the Congress and the Senate, nor for the elective part of the Senate to be renewed in its entirety except in the case that a full dissolution was agreed by the monarch. Still, there was only one case of a separate election (for the Senate in 1877) and no half-Senate elections taking place under the 1876 Constitution. The were officially dissolved on 24 April 1901, with the corresponding
decree setting
election day for 19 May (Congress) and 2 June 1901 (Senate) and scheduling for both chambers to reconvene on 11 June.
Electoral system Voting for the Congress of Deputies was based on
universal manhood suffrage, comprising all
Spanish national males over 25 years of age with full
civil rights, provided they had two years of
residence in a
Spanish municipality and were not
enlisted ranks in
active duty. Additional restrictions excluded those deprived of political rights or barred from public office by a final
sentence, criminally
imprisoned or
convicted,
legally incapacitated,
bankrupt, public
debtors, and
homeless. The Congress of Deputies had one seat per 50,000 inhabitants. Of these, those corresponding to larger
urban areas were elected in
multi-member constituencies using
partial block voting: voters in constituencies electing eight seats or more could choose up to three candidates less that seats at stake; in those with between four and eight seats, up to two less; and in those with between one and four seats, up to one less. The remaining seats were elected in
single-member districts by
plurality voting and distributed among the
provinces of Spain according to population. Additionally,
universities,
economic societies of Friends of the Country and officially organized
chambers of commerce, industry and agriculture, had one seat per 5,000 registered voters. As a result of the aforementioned allocation, 310 single-member districts were established, and each Congress multi-member constituency (a total of 26, electing 92 seats) was entitled the following seats: Voting for the elective part of the Senate was based on
censitary suffrage, comprising Spanish male
householders of voting age, residing in a Spanish municipality, with full political and civil rights, who met either of the following: • Being qualified electors (such as
archbishops,
bishops and
cathedral chapter members, in the
archdioceses; full academics, in the
royal academies;
university authorities and professors, in the
universities; or
provincial deputies); • Being elected as
delegates (either by members with three years of seniority (in the
economic societies of Friends of the Country; or by major
taxpayers for
direct taxes and local authorities, in the
local councils). 180 Senate seats were elected using
indirect,
two-round majority voting. Delegates chosen by local councils—each of which was assigned an initial minimum of one delegate, with one additional delegate for every six
councillors—voted for senators together with provincial deputies. The provinces of
Barcelona,
Madrid and
Valencia were allocated four seats each, and the rest three each, for a total of 150. The remaining 30 seats were allocated to special institutional districts (one each), including major archdioceses, royal academies, universities, and economic societies, each elected by their own qualified electors or delegates. Another 180 seats consisted of senators in their own right (such as the monarch's offspring and the
heir apparent once coming of age (16),
grandees of Spain with an income of
Pts 60,000, certain
general officers—
captain generals and
admirals—the
Patriarch of the Indies and archbishops, and the heads of higher courts and state institutions after two years of service), as well as
senators for life directly appointed by the monarch. The law provided for
by-elections to fill
vacant seats during the legislative term. At least two vacancies were required to trigger a by-election in Congress multi-member constituencies. ==Candidates==