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1867 Spanish general election

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1867 Spanish general election

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10–13 March 1867
1869 →

All 352 seats in the Congress of Deputies
177 seats needed for a majority
Registered396,863[1]
Turnout205,380 (51.8%)[1]
Decrease 1.6 pp
  First party Second party
 
Leader Ramón María Narváez Leopoldo O'Donnell
Party Moderate Liberal Union
Leader's seat

Prime Minister before election

Ramón María Narváez
Moderate

Prime Minister after election

Ramón María Narváez
Moderate

A general election was held in Spain from 10 to 13 March 1867 to elect the members of the 10th Cortes under the Spanish Constitution of 1845. 352 seats in the Congress of Deputies were up for election.[2] [3] Less than 400,000 people were eligible to vote, about 2.6% of the total population.[4]

The election was mostly uncontested by opposition parties, with many candidates from the ruling Moderate Party running unopposed.[5] [6] [7]

Overview

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Under the 1845 Constitution, the Spanish Cortes were conceived as "co-legislative bodies", forming a nearly perfect bicameral system.[8] 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.[9] [10]

Date

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The term of the Congress expired five years from the date of its previous election, unless it was dissolved earlier.[11] Election day was held over four voting days: the first was used to elect polling station officials, and the remaining three were devoted to the parliamentary election itself.[12]

The monarch had the prerogative to dissolve Congress at any given time and call a snap election.[13]

The Congress was officially dissolved on 30 December 1866, with the corresponding decree setting election day to start on 10 March 1867 and scheduling for the chamber to reconvene on 30 March.[14]

Electoral system

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Voting for the Congress of Deputies was based on censitary suffrage, comprising Spanish national males over 25 years of age who met either of the following:[15] [16] [17]

In the Basque Provinces and Navarre—where taxes were not paid directly—voters had instead to prove wealth equivalent to an income of 450 escudos (in capital or property).[18] Additional restrictions excluded those deprived of political rights or barred from public office by a final sentence, criminally imprisoned or convicted, legally incapacitated, bankrupt, and public debtors.[19]

The Congress of Deputies had one seat per 45,000 inhabitants or fraction above 22,500. All were elected in multi-member constituencies corresponding to the provinces of Spain—each assigned a number of seats according to population—using two-round majority voting. Provinces above 337,500 inhabitants were divided into two or more sub-provincial constituencies (with no province electing more than seven seats), whereas municipalities over 45,000 inhabitants were to form an independent constituency each.[20]

As a result of the aforementioned allocation, each Congress multi-member constituency (a total of 77) was entitled the following seats:[21]

Seats Constituencies
7 Almería, Burgos, Cáceres, Játiva, La Almunia, Lérida, Madrid, Pamplona, Tarragona, Toledo, Gerona
6 Avilés, Coruña, Palma, Barcelona, Castellón, Ciudad Real, Huesca, Lugo, Oviedo, Salamanca, Santiago, Zamora
5 Albacete, Alicante, Badajoz, Cuenca, Guadalajara, Manresa, Pontevedra, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Santander, Teruel, Valladolid, Vich, Vigo
4 Alcalá, Alcoy, Antequera, Astorga, Ávila, Baeza, Bilbao, Carmona, Castuera, Córdoba, Ginzo de Limia, Guadix, Huelva, Jaén, León, Liria, Logroño, Mondoñedo, Montilla, Morón, Motril, Mula, Orense, Palencia, Ronda, San Sebastián
3 Arcos, Puerto de Santa María, Segovia, Seville, Soria, Valencia
2 Cádiz, Cartagena, Granada, Málaga, Murcia, Vitoria, Zaragoza
1 Jerez, Lorca

The law provided for by-elections to fill vacant seats during the legislative term, as long as this affected at least one third of the seats assigned to a given constituency.[22]

The Senate was an unelected chamber, whose members were directly appointed for life by the monarch—with no statutory cap—from among Spanish males over 30 years of age, who belonged to certain categories:[23] [24]

Candidates

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Nomination rules

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For the Congress, secular Spanish males of voting age, taxpayers for any direct tax, could run for election.[25] Causes of ineligibility applied to incumbent senators and those excluded from voting, as well as to:[26]

  • Public contractors, within their relevant territories and until the end of their contracts;
  • Holders of a number of territorial posts (such as government-appointed positions; local and provincial employees; and provincial deputies), within their areas of jurisdiction, during their term of office and up to one year afterwards.

Incompatibility rules barred representing multiple constituencies simultaneously, as well as combining legislative roles (deputy and senator) with each other; or combining the role of deputy with:[27]

  • Certain technical official posts (civil, mining and forest engineers); tax collectors; local authorities, during their term of office and up to one year afterwards; and public contractors; all within their areas of jurisdiction;
  • Government-appointed posts, with exceptions including members of the Council of State; heads of diplomatic missions in royal courts in Europe; chief officials in army institutes; senior authorities based in Madrid; high-ranking officials of government departments (provided a public salary of 40,000 reales and three years of service); senior officials in the Royal Household; the heads and members of higher courts in Madrid; general officers; university authorities and professors; and chief engineers with one year of service.

Notes

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  1. ^ These comprised the Council of State and the Supreme Court.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Elecciones para Diputados a Cortes en los años 1863, 1864, 1865 y 1867. Anuario 1866-1867" (in Spanish). National Statistics Institute . Retrieved 9 April 2026.
  2. ^ "Las Regencias y el Reinado de Isabel II (1833-1868). La crisis del moderantismo (1856-1868)" (in Spanish). Congress of Deputies . Retrieved 1 April 2026.
  3. ^ "Relación del número de votos obtenidos por los señores que resultan como Diputados a Cortes electos en las elecciones que acaban de verificarse" (PDF). Madrid Gazette (in Spanish) (81): 4. 22 March 1867. ISSN 0212-1220 . Retrieved 31 March 2026.
  4. ^ Caballero Domínguez 1999, p. 50.
  5. ^ "Hoy es primer día de elecciones: se tiene por cierto que en la gran mayoría de las provincias no habrá más candidatura que la de los adictos al gobierno y al actual estado de cosas". La España (in Spanish). National Library of Spain. 10 March 1867. Retrieved 9 April 2026.
  6. ^ "Hasta mañana no empieza la votación para diputados a Cortes, que continuará en los dias 12 y 13. LA ESPAÑA, único periódico que trata hoy la cuestión electoral, lo hace en los siguientes términos". La Época (in Spanish). National Library of Spain. 10 March 1867. Retrieved 9 April 2026.
  7. ^ Acín Garcés 2016, p. 30.
  8. ^ Constitution (1845), arts. 12–13 & 35.
  9. ^ Constitution (1845), arts. 19, 32, 36 & 39.
  10. ^ "Conocer el Senado. Temas clave. El Senado en la historia constitucional española" (in Spanish). Senate of Spain . Retrieved 11 October 2025.
  11. ^ Constitution (1845), art. 24.
  12. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 63–66, 69 & 80.
  13. ^ Constitution (1845), art. 26.
  14. ^ Royal Decree of 30 December (1866), arts. 1–3.
  15. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 14–19.
  16. ^ Ortega Álvarez & Santaolaya Machetti 1996, pp. 80–81.
  17. ^ Carreras de Odriozola & Tafunell Sambola 2005, p. 1076.
  18. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), art. 116.
  19. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 9 & 20.
  20. ^ Constitution (1845), arts. 20–21; Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 1–3 & 87–89.
  21. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), art. 5 & attached table; Royal Decree of 30 December (1866), art. 2.
  22. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 96–98.
  23. ^ Constitution (1845), arts. 14–15 & 17–18.
  24. ^ Carreras de Odriozola & Tafunell Sambola 2005, p. 1082.
  25. ^ Constitution (1845), art. 22; Law of 18 July (1865), art. 8.
  26. ^ Law of 18 July (1865), arts. 9–10 & 12.
  27. ^ Law of 22 June (1864), arts. 1–2.

Bibliography

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