Talk:Judiciary of Spain

Latest comment: 12 years ago by Timpo in topic Impending Reform

1985 Judicial Reform edit

In 1985, there was a judicial reform in Spain in which the governing council of the judiciary power (General Council of the Judicial Power of Spain) was reformed so that all 20 members are appointed by Congress. Alfonso Guerra, a prominent PSOE leader at the time, was quoted stating "Montesquieu is dead" implying that Spain no longer had an independent judiciary power from the executive and legislative powers. Apparently this has been a matter of edit wars. This reform was widely criticized and famous in Spain at the time and must be included in the articles as it is very important. The wikipedia articles are currently wrong as they insist on stating that Spain has an independent judiciary power which is not the case since 1985. (I also would like Spain to have an independent judiciary power but it is not the case.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.137.26.98 (talk) 10:17, 28 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

That the judiciary is no longer independent is purely your POV and one which doesn't appear in any of the given sources. Freerepublic is a campaigning website and therefore is not a reliable source. If there was criticism of the reform then you can add this but not in the lead per WP:LEAD provided you have suffficient reliable sources. Valenciano (talk) 12:07, 28 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
(editconflict) By the way on the use of Free Republic as a reliable source see this thread for example where consensus was that it isn't a reliable source for our purposes. Not only that but I don't even see the claim about the 1985 reform making the judiciary no longer independent. Not only that but "no longer independent" in the context that it was worded would seem to imply that the judiciary was fully independent of executive influence up to that point which is incorrect. Valenciano (talk) 14:09, 28 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
So if one power (legislative) reforms another power (judiciary) so that it is governed by people appointed by the reforming power (legislative); you still think that Spain has an independent judiciary ?
You're basing that on the faulty assumption that the judiciary was "independent" in the first place prior to the 1985 reform. But what exactly was the situation pre-1985? Let's look at the 1978 constitution: Article 122, section 3: "The General Council of the Judiciary shall consist of the Chief Justice, who shall preside, and of twenty members appointed by the King for a period of five years. Of these, twelve judges and magistrates of all judicial categories, under the terms established by the Act, four by the Congress of Deputies, and four by the Senate, elected in both cases by three-fifths of its members, lawyers and other jurists of acknowledged competence with more than fifteen years of practice in their profession."


So until 1985, 8 members were appointed by the legislature, 12 by "the King." Now how do you think that worked? Do you think the King sat down and independently chose 12 judges? If you do then you've a very poor understanding of how constitutional monarchies work. In practice what happened was that the government of the day particularly the Prime Minister and Justice Minister selected the judges and these were then "approved" by the King. Such approval as in any system with a purely ceremonial head of state was simply a rubber stamp. So arguing that the 1985 reform broke a separation of power is not only uncited POV, it's just plain wrong. Arguably the 1985 reform improved the situation since less judges were chosen purely by the government of the day and more by the legislature.
So in the sense that you mean it's no more independent than American Supreme Court judges, appointed by the President with the approval of the legislature but that isn't a result of the 1985 Act and it is incorrect to assert that it is. Valenciano (talk) 14:24, 28 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

Impending Reform edit

In 2011 the outgoing Socialist government announced reforms which would save costs by transferring the investigative functions of the courts to the police and prosecution service, much like the Anglo-Saxon system. The new Justice minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón proposes wide ranging reforms to "depoliticize" the judiciary following the supreme court process against Baltasar Garzón, until these are published in the Boletín Oficial del Estado probably not much can be done? Timpo (talk) 18:15, 13 February 2012 (UTC)Reply