Argentine Senate Explained

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Honorable Senate of the Argentine Nation
Native Name:Honorable Senado de la Nación Argentina
Coa Pic:Logo_Senado_Argentina.png
Coa Res:150
Legislature:2023–2025 period
House Type:Upper house
Body:National Congress of Argentina
Term Limits:None
Leader1 Type:President of the Senate
Leader1:Victoria Villarruel
Party1:LLA
Election1:10 December 2023
Leader2 Type:Provisional President
Leader2:Bartolomé Abdala
Party2:LLA
Election2:13 December 2023
Leader3 Type:First Minority Leader
Leader3:José Mayans
Party3:UP
Election3:10 December 2019
Leader4 Type:Second Minority Leader
Leader4:Eduardo Vischi
Party4:UCRJxC
Election4:10 December 2023
Members:72
Structure1:File:Senado de la Nación Argentina (2023-2025) (Actualizado).svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:Government (13)

Independents (26)

Opposition (33)

Term Length:6 years
Voting System1:Limited voting
Party-list proportional representation
Last Election1:22 October 2023
(24 seats)
Next Election1:19 October 2025
Session Room:Michelle Bachelet at the Argentine Senate.jpg
Meeting Place:Chamber of Senators, Congress Palace,
Buenos Aires, Argentina

The Honorable Senate of the Argentine Nation (Spanish; Castilian: Honorable Senado de la Nación Argentina) is the upper house of the National Congress of Argentina.

Overview

The National Senate was established by the Argentine Confederation on July 29, 1854, pursuant to Articles 46 to 54 of the 1853 Constitution.[1] There are 72 members: three for each province and three for the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires. The number of senators per province was raised from two to three following the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution as well as the addition of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires' senators. Those changes took effect following the May 14, 1995, general elections.

Senators are elected to six-year terms by direct election on a provincial basis, with the party with the most votes being awarded two of the province's senate seats and the second-place party receiving the third seat. Historically, senators were indirectly elected to nine-year terms by each provincial legislature. These provisions were abolished in the 1994 constitutional amendment, and the first direct elections to the Senate took effect in 2001. Currently one-third of the members are elected every two years; there are no term limits.

The vice president of the republic is ex officio president of the Senate, with a casting vote in the event of a tie. In practice, the provisional president presides over the chamber most of the time.

The Senate must obtain quorum to deliberate, this being an absolute majority. It has the power to approve bills passed by the Chamber of Deputies, call for joint sessions with the lower house or special sessions with experts and interested parties, and submit bills for the president's signature; bills introduced in the Senate must, in turn, be approved by the Chamber of Deputies for their submission to the president. The Senate must introduce any changes to federal revenue sharing policies, ratify international treaties, approve changes to constitutional or federal criminal laws, as well as confirm or impeach presidential nominees to the cabinet, the judiciary, the armed forces, and the diplomatic corps, among other federal posts.[2]

There are twenty-four standing committees made up offifteen members each, namely:[2]

Requirements

According to Section 55 of the Argentine Constitution, candidates for the Argentine Senate must:

Composition

See main article: List of current Argentine senators.

Inter-blocBlocPresident
Union for the Homeland (33)National People's Front (17)José Mayans
Citizen Unity (16)Juliana Di Tullio
Radical Civic Union (13)Eduardo Vischi
La Libertad Avanza (7)Ezequiel Atauche
We Do Federal Coalition (7)Federal Change (4)Juan Carlos Romero
Federal Unity (3)Carlos Espínola
PRO Front (6)Luis Juez
Federal Innovation (3)Front for the Renewal of Concord (2)Carlos Omar Arce
Together We Are Río Negro (1)Mónica Esther Silva
For Santa Cruz (2)José María Carambia
For Social Justice (1)Beatriz Ávila
Source: senado.gob.ar

Senate leadership

The titular president of the Senate is the vice president of Argentina. However, day-to-day leadership of the Senate is exercised by the provisional president.

Current leadership positions include:[3]

Title Officeholder Caucus Province
President of the SenateVictoria VillarruelLa Libertad Avanza
Provisional PresidentBartolomé AbdalaLa Libertad Avanza
Vice PresidentVacantUnion for the Homeland
First Vice PresidentCarolina LosadaRadical Civic Union
Second Vice PresidentAlejandra VigoFederal Unity
Parliamentary Secretarycolspan="2" rowspan="2"
Administrative Secretary
First Minority LeaderJosé MayansUnion for the Homeland
Second Minority LeaderAlfredo CornejoRadical Civic Union

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sesiónes preparatorias e incorporación y juramento de los senadores electos . Argentine Senate . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090718070807/http://www.senado.gov.ar/web/cecap/publicaciones/reglamento/titulo01.htm . 2009-07-18 .
  2. Web site: National Senate Regulations . Argentine Senate . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120524115941/http://www.senado.gov.ar/web/informacion/legislativo/senado/reglamento/reglamento_hsn_ingles.pdf . 2012-05-24 .
  3. Web site: Autoridades. Honorable Senado de la Nación. January 5, 2020.