President of the Congress of Deputies


The president of the Congress of Deputies is the speaker of the Congress of Deputies, the lower house of the Cortes Generales. The president is elected among the members of the Congress and it is, after the king and the prime minister, the highest authority in the Kingdom of Spain.
Although it share the representation of the Cortes Generales with the president of the Senate, the constitutional functions that are granted to the office in terms of royal countersigning and the election process of the head of government, make the president of the Congress the de facto leader of the legislative branch. This position is also reinforced by having Spain an asymmetric bicameralism that gives greater prominence to the lower house
The current office was established by the Spanish Constitution of 1978, however, the position has a tradition of more than 200 years, since its creation in 1810 as President of the Cortes of Cádiz.
The current president, of the 14th Cortes Generales is Meritxell Batet, a member of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party who represents the electoral district of Barcelona.

Functions

The speaker or president of the Congress of Deputies is elected during the constitutive session which follows the General Elections of the Kingdom or during the next session following the resignation of the president.
The election of the president needs an absolute majority in the Chamber. If an absolute majority is not reached in the first vote, a second vote is held immediately after the announcement of the results by the temporal president of the Chamber. The second vote needs only a simple majority . Each deputy is free to write the name he wants on his ballot, even if those deputies of the majority group vote for a candidate predefined by their party.
The president's term ends in case of death, resignation, loss of the status of deputy or after the dissolution of the Congress of Deputies, prior to the holding of general elections.

Vice presidents

The Congress' Standing Rules establishes that there are four vice presidents of the Congress. All the vice presidents are elected in a unique voting and the four most voted candidates are elected.
The main task that the standing orders entrust to the vice presidents is that to replace the president in cases of vacancy, absence or impossibility to exercise. However, the standing orders also give the power to the president to delegated on them other responsibilities.
When the Board of Spokespersons meet, it is needed that at least one of the four vice presidents are present.

List of presidents of the Congress of Deputies