Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes

The Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes (SERC) is a high-ranking official within the Government of Spain in charge of the relations between the executive and the legislative branches. The SERC is a political appointment made by the Monarch with the advice of the minister in charge of the ministerial department.

Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes
Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes
Coat of Arms used by the Government
Incumbent
José Antonio Montilla Martos

since June 8, 2018
Ministry of the Presidency
Secretariat of State for Relations with the Cortes
StyleThe Most Excellent (formal)
Mr. Secretary of State (informal)
AbbreviationSERC
Reports toMinister of the Presidency
NominatorMinister of the Presidency
AppointerMonarch
PrecursorDeputy Minister for Relations with the Cortes
FormationMarch 6, 1981
First holderGabriel Cisneros
Salary 113,145.95 per year[1]
Websitempr.gob.es

This position is normally integrated in the Ministry of the Presidency although in some periods it had its own department. The Secretary of State represents the Government in all the bodies of the Cortes Generales which the Government consider important to go; is in charge for all the relations between the executive branch and both Congress and Senate with the exception of draft bills, Royal decree-laws or Royal legislative decrees whose negotiation and follow-up directly falls to the minister responsible.

It is also in charge of following the activity of the Parliament, advising the government members how to act before Parliament and make legal reports about constitutional amendments or other issues of high relevance. The Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes is assisted by one department, the Directorate-General for Relations with the Cortes.

History

The raison d'être of this Secretariat of State was the need of establishing proper relations between the Government and the Cortes Generales, because the Constitution established a parliamentary system in which the Government is accountable to the Parliament, unlike the dictatorship period when the legislative power was a mere facade and was subordinated to the executive branch.

For these reasons, in 1977 the position of the Deputy Minister for Relations with the Cortes was created. This minister had under its authority a Secretary-General for Relations with the Cortes, a Parliamentary Secretary for Relations with Congress and Senate and a Secretary for Relations with the Public Administration.[2] This Secretary-General assumed most of the powers of the current official, so it can be considered the direct precursor of the Secretariat of State.

This Secretariat of State was organized through two departments: one in charge of the legislative activity and other in charge of the government accountability to parliament.[3]

Since its creation, the Secretary of State has undergone enormous modifications, being even elevated to rank of Ministry between 1986 and 1993. Between 2009 and 2011, its name changed to Secretary of State for Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs.

Structure

From the Secretary of State depends the following officials:

  • The Director-General for Relations with the Cortes
    • The Deputy Director-General for Legislative Coordination
    • The Deputy Director-General for Parliamentary Initiatives.
    • The Deputy Director-General for Written Control.
    • The Deputy Director-General for Normative Proposals and Parliamentary Documentation.
  • Cabinet of the Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes
    • Chief of Staff.
    • Three Advisors.

List of Secretaries of State

References

  1. "Retribuciones para el año 2017 para el organismo Ministerio de la Presidencia". transparencia.gob.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-09-23.
  2. Real Decreto 1692/1977, de 11 de julio, por el que se dictan medidas urgentes de Organización en la Presidencia del Gobierno.
  3. "Real Decreto 325/1981, de 6 de marzo, por el que se reestructuran determinados órganos de la Administración del Estado". boe.es. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
  4. Real Decreto 338/1981, de 6 de marzo, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado para las Relaciones con las Cortes a don Gabriel Cisneros Laborda.
  5. Real Decreto 3386/1982, de 7 de diciembre, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado para las Relaciones con las Cortes y la Coordinación Legislativa a don Virgilio Zapatero Gómez.
  6. Real Decreto 798/1996, de 7 de mayo, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don José María Michavila Núñez.
  7. Real Decreto 654/2000, de 5 de mayo, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don Jorge Fernández Díaz.
  8. Real Decreto 686/2004, de 19 de abril, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don Francisco Caamaño Domínguez.
  9. Real Decreto 309/2009, de 6 de marzo, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Asuntos Constitucionales y Parlamentarios a don José Luis de Francisco Herrero.
  10. Real Decreto 1871/2011, de 23 de diciembre, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don José Luis Ayllón Manso.
  11. "Real Decreto 52/2018, de 2 de febrero, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don Rubén Moreno Palanques".
  12. "Real Decreto 391/2018, de 8 de junio, por el que se nombra Secretario de Estado de Relaciones con las Cortes a don José Antonio Montilla Martos". boe.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-08-17.
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