Parliamentarism in Cádiz The agitated political life of the
Contemporary Age in Spain was punctually reflected in each of the phases that Spanish parliamentarism went through. Inaugurating the characteristics of contemporary liberal parliamentarism (
national sovereignty,
universal suffrage,
separation of powers, recognition of
rights), the
Cortes of Cadiz stood out for their vital debates and the revolutionary nature of their legislation. These Cortes in fact exercised all the power, given that
Ferdinand VII remained until 22 March 1814, retained in France by Napoleon. Meeting in 1810 in
Cadiz, as it was the only city defensible against the French invasion, they used the so-called
Real Teatro de las Cortes as their meeting place. At the end of the war, during a brief period in 1814, they chose the former church of the
Colegio de Doña María de Aragón of the Augustinian friars as their meeting place in the city of Madrid, part of the complex of the
Royal Monastery of La Encarnación. , 1862. After the initial
moderate reform proposals of the so-called
jovellanists (
Antonio de Capmany) were overwhelmed, the Cadiz deputies were politically divided into two tendencies:
liberals and
absolutists. The predominance of the liberals (
Agustín Argüelles,
Diego Muñoz Torrero, the
Count of Toreno) determined the orientation of their legislative work towards the institutional dismantling of the — and the construction of a liberal State (suppression of the
seigniories and the
Inquisition,
freedom of the press, drafting of the
constitution of 1812). One of the absolutist deputies, the Bishop of Orense
Pedro de Quevedo y Quintano, was sanctioned for protesting during the oath to the Constitution. , 1912. Among the presidents of the Cortes were Muñoz Torrero,
Ramón Lázaro de Dou,
Jaime Creus Martí (who would later preside over the absolutist
Urgel Regency),
Miguel Antonio de Zumalacárregui (brother of the later Carlist leader) and several representatives of the Spanish Americans, such as
Antonio Joaquín Pérez Martínez (who intervened in the later
independence of Mexico). The word "
liberal", which was born in the Cadiz debates, spread to the international political vocabulary.
Courts of the Trienio Liberal '', Madrid, 1820. The
Pronunciamiento of Riego (in
Cabezas de San Juan, 1 January 1820) put an end to the first absolutist period of Ferdinand VII, who shortly after returning to Spain had dissolved the Cortes and declared the Cadiz legislation null and void (4 May 1814). Once the constitution of 1812 was reestablished, the Cortes were reconvened. The new
Cortes of the Trienio Liberal met in Madrid, in the same building of the Colegio de doña María de Aragón, between 1820 and 1823. There were two convocations (1820 and 1822) in which the deputies were elected with the current constitutional criteria (universal male
indirect suffrage and the same constituencies, including the representation of the American Spaniards, whose territory was in the midst of a
war for independence). They had a brief and agitated life, characterized by internal confrontations between
doceañistas and
veinteañistas liberals. Among the presidents of the Cortes were
José de Espiga (who presided over the inaugural session and the swearing in of the king in 1820),
Rafael del Riego himself (those of 1822),
José María Calatrava,
Miguel Ricardo de Álava,
Manuel Flores Calderón,
Francisco Martínez de la Rosa and the Count of Toreno. Given the distrust between king and Cortes, the latter exercised power in practice, without taking into account the executive powers of the monarch, whom the foreign powers considered a prisoner (as had happened in the French Revolution with Louis XVI). The matter of the diplomatic
notes issued was submitted to the Cortes for deliberation; when they were rejected by both the Congress and the Government, they gave reason to the powers of the
Holy Alliance to intervene in defense of royal absolutism and to commission France to invade Spain with the
Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis. under the
regency of Maria Christina, were convened by means of a
Royal Statute for the convocation of the general Cortes of the Kingdom, a quasi-constitutional text (of the type of
carta otorgada) under whose conditions the parliamentary life of the
reign of Isabella II began, in the midst of the
first Carlist war and characterized by the alternation in power, through
pronunciamiento of military men linked to political groups (the so-called "
espadones" or "
ayacuchos"), of
moderate and
progressive liberals. The
electoral system was based on the
census suffrage, which restricted the vote to those who had a well-to-do social position, and there was a change from
indirect election to
direct election of deputies. The loss of the colonies, except for Cuba and the Philippines, meant that deputies from the American continent no longer came. Seeking similarity with
British parliamentarism, a
bicameral system was established, with the Cortes divided into two chambers: the lower chamber or
Estamento de Procuradores (which ended up being called the
Congress of Deputies) and the upper chamber or
House of Peers (which ended up being called the
Senate). The
Proceres met in the former building of the Cortes (the Colegio de doña María de Aragón), and the Procuradores in the
Convento del Espíritu Santo (in the
Carrera de San Jerónimo, whose building was profoundly reformed by
Narciso Pascual between 1843 and 1850, with a neoclassical façade with colonnade and pediment —
Palacio de las Cortes—). . There were convocations of Cortes in 1835 and 1836. Given the new political context, which assumed the convening of the Cortes in the capital of the kingdom, they are no longer called "Cortes de Madrid" in any text; although article 19 of the Statute provided that
the procurators of the Kingdom would meet in the town designated by the Royal Convocation to hold the Cortes.
The uprising of the sergeants of La Granja (1836) proclaimed once again the Constitution of 1812 and produced the dissolution of the statutory Cortes. The new
constituent Cortes of 1836-1837 elaborated a new text that responded to the criteria of the
progressive liberals (
Spanish Constitution of 1837). . The
Cortes of 1840 institutionally redirected the liberal revolution, elaborating among others the
Law of Town Halls, which was approved and sanctioned by the Crown. When it was about to be put into effect,
Espartero's pronouncement took place, which led to the banishment of the queen governor and made him the new regent. In 1841, 1842 and 1843 Cortes were convened by the
regency of Espartero. The growing opposition to his government finally led to his resignation and departure from Spain. The Cortes declared the young queen of legal age (only 13 years old), to the cry of
Salustiano Olózaga:
God save the queen, God save the country. The period between 1845 and 1855, dominated by
General Narváez, is known as the
Década moderada. Among the most prominent speakers of the time was
Donoso Cortés. The progressives dominated the
Cortes of 1854, convened after the
Vicalvarada and the
Manifesto of Manzanares, and which subsisted during the so-called
Bienio Progresista (1854-1856). They drafted a new constitutional text that did not enter into force (it would have been the
Spanish Constitution of 1856). The same
General O'Donnell, who had brought about the beginning of the biennium, provoked its end, dissolving the Cortes on 2 September 1856. A prolonged period of parliamentary predominance of the
Liberal Union began, in which O'Donnel alternated in government with the
moderates of Narváez, between the
Cortes of 1858 and the
Cortes of 1866. In the
Cortes of 1867 the moderate predominance left practically no parliamentary representation to the Unionists, thus diminishing the political base of the regime, in the midst of a growing opposition, which organized itself outside the system (
night of San Daniel,
Pact of Ostende). The maintenance in power of
Luis González Bravo was done at the cost of increasing
political repression to unbearable extremes, which justified the revolution.
Cortes of the Sexenio Democrático is represented addressing the Cortes from his seat, in the monument of the Paseo de la Castellana in Madrid (sculptor
Mariano Benlliure). After the
revolution of 1868, which sent Isabel II into exile, the
Cortes of 1869 elaborated the
Spanish Constitution of 1869, with democratic criteria (
universal male suffrage). The
Cortes of 1872-1873 experimented a republican system (
First Spanish Republic) after the abdication of the ephemeral King
Amadeus I of Savoy. The
''coup d'état'' of Pavia (3 January 1874), which violently broke into the Cortes, and the subsequent
dictatorship of Serrano, suspended the democratic institutional life. ''" to that of another famous
for his horse: Espartero. A very similar image was repeated on February 23, 1981, with the
entry of Colonel Tejero into the Cortes. The
pronunciamiento de Martínez Campos (29 December 1874) imposed the
restoration of the monarchy on the son of Isabel II,
Alfonso XII. During the parliamentary debates of the six-year period,
Emilio Castelar's interventions made his name synonymous with
orator.
Restoration parliamentarism After an initial period of total predominance of the
Liberal-Conservative Party of
Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, after the
Pact of El Pardo (24 November 1885) the political life of the Restoration was characterized by
turnism, the alternation in power of the conservatives with the
Liberal-Progressive Party of
Práxedes Mateo Sagasta. When the time came, the government of the day resigned, the king (or the queen regent) called the leader of the opposition to form a new government, and the latter called elections, conveniently directed from the
Ministry of home affairs, which activated the local networks of the
caciquism to obtain a parliamentary majority, using all kinds of ingenious subterfuges (
pucherazo). in speaker's pose. Monument in front of the Senate. The political system of the Restoration was strongly criticized, especially since the
disaster of 1898, when people began to speak of "
regenerationism" (
Joaquín Costa,
Oligarquía y caciquismo,
Gumersindo de Azcárate,
El régimen parlamentario en la práctica). Nevertheless, turnism continued to function uninterruptedly until the
crisis of 1917, after which it became increasingly difficult to compose such majorities. The political system lived in crisis until
Primo de Rivera's ''coup d'état'' (13 September 1923), which among other things was a way to avoid the scandal of the parliamentary investigation of the
Annual disaster of 1921 (
Picasso report of 1922–1923). as deputy in 1910 for Madrid. The
Constitution of 1876, which did not recognize national sovereignty (it established it as shared between the Cortes and the King) nor did it pronounce itself on the nature of suffrage, was flexible enough to allow the Cortes of the Restoration to introduce universal male suffrage (from 1890) or the
abolition of slavery (a recurring theme in Spanish parliamentarism), which the Cortes of Cadiz in 1811 raised unsuccessfully, was reattempted by the Cortes of the Sexenio —the
Moret or
freedom of wombs law of 1870— and was not completed until the Cortes of the Restoration, in 1880-1886 —despite the opposition of the pressure group or "
negrero party" closely linked to
Cánovas himself—). As long as the system worked, no "
non-dynastic" party (
Carlists,
Republicans,
workers' movement,
peripheral nationalists) could aspire to political participation. As notable exceptions were the obtaining of a deputy's seat by
Pablo Iglesias (1910) or the electoral success of the
Lliga Regionalista (1901), in both cases in strongly urbanized and industrialized constituencies, less influenced by the caciquismo. == 20th and 21st centuries ==