REGPEX Profile
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Spain - Galicia


The Galician Regional Parliament (Parlamento de Galicia) was established in 1981.

Number of Members of Parliament
75.

Length of the parliamentary mandate
Four years.

Mode of selection of the Members of Parliament
Direct election. For further information, see Article 11 of the Statute of Autonomy of Galicia, available here (ES).

Population included in the constituency of the regional parliament
2.800.000 inhabitants.

  1. Competences (legislative and non-legislative), legal bases and policy areas where the regional parliament is active
  2. List of committees/sub-committees or working groups in the regional parliament 
  3. Committees in charge of scrutinising subsidiarity
  4. Staff in charge of subsidiarity scrutiny  
  5. Subsidiarity check
  6. Cooperation/coordination at the regional level  
  7. Cooperation/coordination at the central level  
  8. Cooperation/coordination at the cross-regional level 
  9. Cooperation/coordination at the EU level 


Competences (legislative and non-legislative), legal bases and policy areas where the regional parliament is active  

Legislative: The Regional Parliament has legislative competence in all areas recognised by the Region's Statute of Autonomy, i.e. those which do not come under the remit of the National Government and which are governed by the Spanish Constitution (available here (EN). These competences include inter alia land use, coastal and urban development, housing, culture, social assistance and hydraulic installations. Moreover, the Regional Parliament is responsible for approving the regional budget. For further information, see Title II of the Statute of Autonomy (see link above.)

Non-legislative: The Regional Parliament is inter alia responsible for controlling the Executive and appointing senators for the high chamber of the Spanish Parliament (Cortes Generales), appointing and dismissing the President of Galicia, and lodging appeals on grounds of unconstitutionality.


List of committees/sub-committees or working groups in the regional parliament
The Legislative Standing Committees are the following:

  • Committee 1: Institutional, General Administration, Justice and Home Affairs;
  • Committee 2: Land-Use Planning, Public Works, Environment and Services;
  • Committee 3: Economy, Finance and Budget;
  • Committee 4: Education and Culture;
  • Committee 5: Health, Social Policy and Employment;
  • Committee 6: Industry, Energy, Trade and Tourism;
  • Committee 7: Agriculture, Food, Livestock and Forestry;
  • Committee 8: Fisheries and Shell Fishing.

For further information, see here (ES).

Committees in charge of scrutinising subsidiarity   
The Committee for European Affairs.

Staff in charge of subsidiarity scrutiny  
There is no staff specifically in charge of subsidiarity monitoring. This issue is addressed by the general staff of the Regional Parliament.

Subsidiarity check  
Nature (selective/systematic): Systematic.
Procedure: The procedure is organised through an eight-step process that is completed in a maximum of four weeks:

  • Receipt of draft EU legislation;
  • Distribution of draft legislation by the Presidency to the Committee for European Affairs and the parliamentary groups;
  • Initial scrutiny by parliamentary groups, leading (within ten days) to a proposal to issue a reasoned opinion;
  • If no concern is raised, the procedure ends. In the opposite case and if deemed necessary, the regional government may issue its opinion within a timeframe of ten days;
  • Convocation of a plenary meeting of the Committee for European Affairs;
  • If deemed necessary, the regional government may submit a report on compliance with the subsidiarity principle up to 48 hours before the Committee meeting;
  • The Committee for European Affairs approves the opinion;
  • The Bureau of the Galician Regional Parliament submits the decision to the Joint Committee for European Affairs.

Cooperation/coordination at the regional level 
 

When necessary, cooperation takes place on an informal basis between the Executive and the Regional Parliament.
Cooperation/coordination at the central level 
EU draft legislation is forwarded by the Spanish Parliament (Cortes Generales) to all Spanish regional parliaments. In turn, the latter may transfer resolutions on the infringement of the subsidiarity principle to the Spanish Parliament within four weeks. The legal basis is found in Act 8/1994 of 19 May 1994, as amended by Act 24/2009 of 22 December 2009, regulating the Joint Committee for European Affairs and bringing it in line with the Lisbon Treaty.


Cooperation/coordination at the cross-regional level 
There is some cooperation through the Conference of Presidents of the Autonomous Parliaments of Spain (COPREPA), which provides a forum for the presidents of the regional assemblies to share experiences. In order to facilitate the subsidiarity monitoring by regional parliaments and the cross-regional cooperation in this field, the Parliaments of Aragon and Navarre have published a guide for drafting opinions in the context of the early warning system (Guía para la elaboración de los dictámenes autonómicos en el sistema de alerta temprana, available here (ES)). This guide was presented and discussed at the March 2011 meeting of COPREPA.


Cooperation/coordination at the EU level  
There is some cooperation through CALRE (Conference of European Regional Legislative Assemblies), which coordinates a working group on regional democracy models.

Important legal notice
The data and information contained in the profiles has been collected by an external contractor (University of Leuven - Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies Center and University of Edinburgh - Edinburgh Research and Innovation ) and does not represent the official views of the Committee of the Regions (CoR). Furthermore, the CoR does not guarantee its accuracy and may not be held responsible for any errors which, despite careful preparation and checking, may appear, nor for the use that may be made of this data and information. Should you require further information or wish to notify us of any modification in relation to the data or information contained in the profiles, please contact the Subsidiarity Team within Unit E2 (subsidiarity@cor.europa.eu). The policy on data protection (as laid down in Regulation (EC) N° 45/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2000 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data by the Community institutions and bodies and on the free movement of such data), applies to the personal data included in the profiles. Should you require further information or wish to exercise your rights under Regulation (EC) 45/2001 (e.g. access to or rectification of data), please contact the data controller (Head of Unit E2). If required, you can also contact the CoR Data Protection Officer. You have the right to recourse to the European Data Protection Supervisor at any time.