Spain's fifty provinces (provincias) are grouped into seventeen autonomous communities (comunidades autónomas), in addition to two African autonomous cities (ciudades autónomas) (Ceuta and Melilla).
The autonomous communities have wide legislative and executive autonomy, with their own parliaments and regional governments. The distribution of powers is different for every community, as laid out in the "autonomy statute" (estatuto de autonomía). There is a de facto distinction between "historic" communities (Basque Country, Catalonia, Galicia, and Andalusia) and the rest. The historic ones initially received more functions, including the ability of the regional presidents to choose the timing of the regional elections (as long as they happen at most 4 years apart). As another example, the Basque Country and Catalonia have full-range police forces of their own: Ertzaintza in the Basque Country and Mossos d'Esquadra in Catalonia. Other communities have a more limited force or none at all (eg. Policía Autónoma Andaluzahttp://www.cartujo.org/pag(a9).htm Orden Ministerial de 31 de agosto de 1993 por la que se constituye una Unidad Autónoma del Cuerpo Nacional de Policía y se adscribe a la Comunidad Autonómica Andaluza.).
The Constitution recognizes in its Article 2 the right of "regions and nationalities" to self government. The initial intent was not that every part of Spain should become an autonomous community, but that only the so-called historic nationalities would be granted this right. However, while the Constitution was still being drafted, there was a popular outcry in Andalusia for its own right to autonomy, with over a million and a half people demonstrating in the streets of Andalusia on 4th December 1977. This would lead to the inclusion of two articles regarding autonomy in the finished constitution in 1978: Article 143, which would establish the possibility of all regions becoming autonomous communities, with a certain range of limited transferred powers (this was dubbed at the time café para todos ("coffee for everybody") by critics of the decentralization); and Article 151, that would set the roles of autonomous communities with a higher degree of devolved functions.
Article 151 would automatically include the historic nationalities, which have previously enjoyed autonomy during the Second Spanish Republic, as ruled by the Spanish Constitution of 1931, the Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia, till the Spanish Civil War crushed this experiment. Nevertheless, this article also offered the possibility of other regions or nationalities accessing the same level of autonomy if approved on referendum.
A separate statute of autonomy for Andalusia had been drawn and submitted by Blas Infante, then approved by parliament in June 1936, to be voted in referendum in September 1936. However the start of the Civil War in July and the assassination of Infante by Franco's rebels in August of the same year put an end to the autonomist project for Andalusia.
In spite of this, Andalusia was never recognised as a "historic nationality" in the 1978 constitution. This caused a great deal of indignation at the time and fired the fuse of a popular campaign which would lead to a successful referendum vote on 28th February 1980 that required a supermajority. Andalusia would still have to wait two more years, after more political turmoil and broken promises, to join the Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia on earning its right to a higher degree of autonomous government.http://www.el-mundo.es/especiales/2005/06/espana/estatutos_autonomia/estatutos/andalucia.html elmundo.es Especial "La España de las Autonomías"
Since then, there has been a tendency for "slow-track" communities (those that accessed autonomy via article 143) to aspire to the function range of their elders (Andalusia, Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia). Even in communities without a strong nationalist or regionalist tradition, the local branches of national parties fight for more power and budgets. Current points of disagreement are tax collection and representation at institutions of the European Union.
See also:
The map is stable, though some minor groups claim separate communities for León (León, Zamora, Salamanca), Eastern Andalusia (Almería, Granada, Jaén), Orihuela, and Álava. Also, there is an enclave of Burgos (Castilla y León) inside Álava (País Vasco), called Condado de Treviño where some inhabitants would like to leave Burgos and join Álava.
Lists of subnational entities | Geography of Spain | Autonomous communities of Spain | Subdivisions of Spain
Comunidá autonoma | Comunidá autónoma | Аўтаномная Супольнасьць | Автономни области в Испания | Comunitat autònoma | Autonomní společenství Španělska | Autonome Gemeinschaften Spaniens | Comunidad autónoma | Aŭtonoma Komunumo de Hispanio | Communautés autonomes d'Espagne | 에스파냐의 자치 지방 | Wilayah otonomi Spanyol | Comunità autonome della Spagna | קהילות אוטונומיות של ספרד | Autonom Gemeinschafte vu Spuenien | Spanyol tartományok | Autonome regio (Spanje) | スペインの地方行政区画 | Spanias autonome regioner | Spanske autonome regionar | Podział administracyjny Hiszpanii | Comunidades autónomas da Espanha | Comunităţi autonome în Spania | Административное деление Испании | Autonomous communities of Spain | Administratívne členenie Španielska | Spaniens autonoma regioner | Mga awtonomong pamayanan at lungsod ng Espanya | 西班牙行政區劃
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"Autonomous communities of Spain".
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