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Ayuntamiento of Valencia

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City Council of Valencia
Ayuntamiento
logo of city with shield and words Ajuntament de Valencia a large building with a central tower and corner towers with domed tops that are tiled
Casa Consistorial de Valencia, España
StateValencian Community
CountrySpain
Websitewww.valencia.es
Legislative branch
Councillor32
Meeting placeValencia City Hall
Executive branch
MayorMaría José Catalá

The Ayuntamiento of Valencia, or Valencia City Council, is the institution that is responsible for governing the city and municipality of Valencia (Spain). It is called in Valencian: Ajuntament de València or Spanish: Ayuntamiento de Valencia. It is presided over by the mayor of Valencia, who since 1979 has been democratically elected by universal suffrage. Since 2023, the position is held by María José Catalá, of the People's Party. The institution is located and holds formal meetings in the Valencia City Hall or in Valencian: Palau consistorial de València and in Spanish: Casa Consistorial de Valencia. The building is also often called the Ayuntamiento by metonymy.[1]

Operation

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The City Council is the group of political representation of citizens in the municipal government. It directly assumes the representation of the community and determines actions on the issues confronting the city.[2]

The councilors of the City of Valencia are chosen by universal suffrage in elections held every four years. The D'Hondt system is the mathematical algorithm used in Spain to distribute the councilors of the city councils in proportion to the votes obtained by each candidacy.

History

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Since the recovery of democracy in Spain, nine municipal elections have been held, and the city has been governed by three political parties, the PSOE, the PP and Compromís.en ES From the first municipal elections in 1979 until 1991, the PSOE governed the city. During these years there were three mayors, Fernando Martínez Castellano (1979), Ricard Pérez Casado (1979-1988), and Clementina Ródenas Villena (1988-1991). While from 1991 to 2015, the PP has governed the city under the leadership of mayor Rita Barberá Nolla. From the elections of May 2015 and until the elections of 2023, Joan Ribó of Compromís held the mayor's office, with the support of the PSPV in the two legislatures of his mandate and València en Comúin ES during the first. Since the municipal elections of May 2023, María José Catalá of the People's Party of the Valencian Community is the mayor of the city but avoided a formal coalition with Vox, opting for governing in minority with specific pacts.[3]

Investiture agreements or government coalitions

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Since 1979, the political parties represented in the City Council have reached six occasions to form government through coalition when none of them reached an absolute majority of seats located in 17 councilors. The parties that agreed to obtain the government of the city after the elections and the number of representatives they added is indicated in the following table:

Mandato Partidos implicados Concejales
1979-1983 PSOE+PCPV
19 / 33 (58%)
1987-1991 PSOE+IU/UPV
15 / 33 (45%)
1995-1999 PP+UV
17 / 33 (52%)
2015-2019 Compromís+PSPV-PSOE+VeC
17 / 33 (52%)
2019-2023 Compromís+PSPV|PSPV-PSOE
17 / 33 (52%)
2023-2027 PP+Vox
17 / 33 (52%)

Mayoralty or Alcaldía

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After the 1979 Spanish local elections, the Ayuntamiento of Valencia was led by these mayors:

Office of the mayor of Valencia
Alcaldesa/Alcalde Start of Term End of Term Political Party
Para los alcaldes desde el año 1840 al 1979 véase el anexo.
Fernando Martínez Castellano 1979 1979 PSPV-PSOE
Ricard Pérez Casado 1979 1988
es:Clementina Ródenas Villena 1988 1991
Rita Barberá Nolla 1991 2015 Partido Popular
Joan Ribó i Canut 2015 2023 Compromísin ES
María José Catalá Verdet 2023 En el cargo Partido Popular

Composition of the Ayuntamiento

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Coucil of the Ayuntamiento

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View of the Salón de Plenos or the Council Chamber

For the City Council of 2023-2027, The municipal corporation is made up of 33 councilors.[4]

Political Party Councilor Portfolio
María José Catalá Verdet Mayor
María José Ferrer San Segundoin ES First Deputy Mayor
Julia Climent Monzó Third Deputy Mayor
Juan Manuel Giner Corell Fourth Deputy Mayor
Juan Carlos Caballero Montañésin ES Councilor and Spokesperson for the Ayuntamiento and the Municipal PP[5] [6] [7]
Paula María Llobet Vilarrasa Fifth Deputy Mayor
Santiago Ballester Casabuena Sixth Deputy Mayor
Jesús Carbonell Aguilar Seventh Deputy Mayor
José Marí Olano Councilor
José Luis Moreno Maicas Councilor
Carlos Luis Mundina Gómez Councilor
Marta Torrado de Castro Councilor
María del Rocío Gil Uncio Councilor
Compromís:Acord per Guanyarin ES
Carmen Luisa (Papi) Robles Galindo Councilor and Municipal Spokesperson for Compromís
Gloria Amparo Tello Company Councilor
Pere Sixte Fuset i Tortosain ES Councilor
Sergi Campillo Fernández Councilor
Lucía Beamud Villanueva ConcCouncilorejala
Giuseppe Grezziin ES Councilor
Ferran Puchades Vila Councilor
Eva Coscollà Grau Councilor
Lluïsa Notario Villanueva Councilor
Borja Jesús Sanjuán Roca Councilor and Municipal Spokesperson for PSPV-PSOE
María Teresa Ibáñez Giménez Councilor
Nuria Llopis Borrego Councilor
Javier Ismael Mateo García Councilor
Elisa Valía Cotanda Councilor
María Pérez Herrero Councilor
Borja Santamaría Herrero Councilor
Juan Manuel Bádenas Carpio Second Deputy Mayor and Municipal Spokesperson for Vox[8]
José Vicente Gosálbez Payá Councilor
Mónica Gil Cano Councilor
Cecilia Carmen Herrero Camilleri Councilor
Concejales proclamados que han abandonado su cargo
Concejal Partido Fecha renuncia Reemplazado por Toma de posesión
Joan Ribó Canut[9] Compromís:Acord per Guanyar 27 de marzo de 2024 Lluïsa Notario Villanueva[10] 30 de abril de 2024
Sandra Gómez López[11] PSPV-PSOE 12 de julio de 2024 Borja Santamaría Herrero[12] 23 de julio de 2024

Local Government Board

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María José Catalá during her inauguration as mayor

The Local Government Board is a group that collaborates with the mayor on the executive and administrative functions of the city government. As president of the Local Government Board, the mayor appoints the other members, whose number cannot exceed 11, not including the president, which is one third of the 33 seats on the City Council. For the 2023-2027 legislature, the Local Government Board includes two members of Vox as part of the alliance.[13]


Member Party Primary Portfolio
María José Catalá Verdet
PP
Alcaldesa-Presidenta
María José Ferrer San Segundo First Deputy Mayor
Juan Manuel Bádenas Carpio
Vox
Second Deputy Mayor
Julia Climent Monzó
PP
Third Deputy Mayor
Juan Manuel Giner Corell Fourth Deputy Mayor
Juan Carlos Caballero Montañés Spokesperson for the City Council
José Marí Olano Councilor
José Luis Moreno Maicas Councilor
Paula María Llobet Vilarrasa Fifth Deputy Mayor
Santiago Ballester Casabuena Sixth Deputy Mayor
Jesús Carbonell Aguilar Seventh Deputy Mayor
Cecilia Carmen Herrero Camilleri
Vox
Councilor

Government Departments

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The different powers exercised by the City Council can be grouped into various areas of government according to their theme and similarity of function as determined by the mayor. Each department has a deputy mayor or councilor to direct, plan, coordinate, and define the political objectives. In addition, each department leaders will have councilors delegated to direct the activity of the department. For the 2023-2027 legislature, the Valencia City Council is composed of the mayor's area and 11 other areas of government with the following delegated departments:[13]

Department Leaders Party Delegacion
Alcaldía María José Catalá Verdet PP Alcaldesa
Juan Carlos Caballero Montañés PP Institutional Relations and relations with other administrations. Press and Media. Spokesperson for the Municipal Government.
José Marí Olano PP Large Projects
Paula María Llobet Vilarrasa PP Turism. Innovation, Technology, Digital Agenda, and Attracting Investments
Finance and Participation María José Ferrer San Segundo PP Finance and Taxes. City Districts, Participation, and Neighborhood Action.
Juan Carlos Caballero Montañés PP Transparency, Information and Advocacy
Employment, Entrepreneurship, and Training. Juan Manuel Bádenas Carpio Vox Employment and Training
Cecilia Carmen Herrero Camilleri Vox Entrepreneurship
Heritage. Human and Technical Resources Julia Climent Monzó PP Human Resources. Central Technical Services. Hiring.
José Marí Olano PP Patrimony. Administrative Controls.
Security and Mobility Jesús Carbonell Aguilar PP City Police. Transportation. Public Spaces.
Juan Carlos Caballero Montañés PP Fire Department. Civil Protection.
Santiago Ballester Casabuena PP Commerce and Markets
Urban Planning, Housing, and Licensing Juan Manuel Giner Corell PP Housing. Management of Construction and Infrastructure Maintenance. Urban Planning and Management. Licensing and Permitting.
Parks, Gardens, and Natural Spaces Juan Manuel Bádenas Carpio Vox Parks and Gardens
José Vicente Gosálbez Payá Vox Saler Forest.in ES Albufera Natural Park
Mónica Gil Cano Vox Beaches
Cecilia Carmen Herrero Camilleri Vox Agriculture
Residuos, mejora climática y gestión del agua Carlos Luis Mundina Gómez PP Cleaning and Waste Management. Integral Water Cycle. Climate, Acoustic, and Energy Efficiency Improvement. Cemeteries and Funeral Services.
Family, Seniors and Traditions. Mónica Gil Cano Vox Family, Youth and Childhood. Festivals and Traditions.
José Vicente Gosálbez Payá Vox Senior Citizens. Health and Consumption.
Social Welfare. Marta Torrado de Castro PP Social Services.
María del Rocío Gil Uncio PP Equality
Cultura, educación, deportes y Fallas Jose Luis Moreno Maicas PP Cultural action, heritage and cultural resources.
María del Rocío Gil Uncio PP Education. Sports.
Santiago Ballester Casabuena PP Fallas

Municipal Boards

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The Municipal Boards are decentralized management bodies whose purpose is to bring municipal management closer to the neighbors and encourage their participation in matters of municipal competence.[14] Each board has a President and a Vice President who are appointed and dismissed by the Mayor or the plenary council. The President represents the Mayor within the scope of the City Council and ensures the correct application of the regulations and programs of the City of Valencia in its specific area. The territory of a particular Municipal Board does not necessarily coincide with the districts or neighborhoods of Valencia (Divisions of Valencia in Castilian).[15]

Suburban Mayor's Offices

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In the municipality of Valencia, in addition to the main urban nucleus of the city, there are 15 other urban centers called pedanías that are governed under the authority of the Ayuntamiento. The Mayor of Valencia has the authority to appoint a neighbor resident of each of the districts to perform the tasks that the law entrusts to the them. They are the authority responsible for the fulfillment of the municipal tasks in their district and they have other powers delegated by the mayor's office of the Municipality to bring the administration closer to the community.

References

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  1. ^ "Competencias y organización - Ayuntamiento de Valencia - València". www.valencia.es. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  2. ^ "Pleno del Ayuntamiento - València". www.valencia.es. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  3. ^ Vázquez, Cristina (2023-06-17). "Catalá sale elegida nueva alcaldesa de Valencia sin los votos de Vox y promete diálogo y consensos". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  4. ^ Ayuntamiento de Valencia. "Pleno del Ayuntamiento - València". www.valencia.es. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  5. ^ Ayuntamiento de Valencia. "Pleno Ayuntamiento - No tocar - València". www.valencia.es. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  6. ^ H.G (2023-06-16). "Catalá nombra a Juan Carlos Caballero portavoz del grupo". Levante-EMV (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  7. ^ Valencia Plaza (2023). "María José Catalá nombra a Juan Carlos Caballero portavoz 'popular' en el Ayuntamiento de València". Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  8. ^ Las Provincias (2023). "El reparto de las dedicaciones exclusivas desata otra polémica en el Ayuntamiento de Valencia". Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  9. ^ EP (2024-03-27). "Joan Ribó se despide del Ayuntamiento de Valencia entre aplausos: "Nadie me quitará el orgullo de haber sido alcalde"". El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 6 August 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  10. ^ S.L, EDICIONES PLAZA. "Lluïsa Notario, nueva concejala de Compromís en el Ayuntamiento de València en sustitución de Joan Ribó". Valencia Plaza (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2 August 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  11. ^ Hortensia García (2024-07-12). "SANDRA GÓMEZ SE DESPIDE DEL AYUNTAMIENTO: "ME VOY TRANQUILA"". Levante EMV (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 7 October 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  12. ^ S.L, EDICIONES PLAZA. "Borja Santamaría toma posesión como concejal socialista en el Ayuntamiento de València". Valencia Plaza (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2 August 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  13. ^ a b Gil, Manuel (2023-10-20). "PP y Vox firman un pacto para gobernar juntos en València: así queda el reparto de concejalías del ayuntamiento". Cadena SER (in European Spanish). Archived from the original on 19 December 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  14. ^ Ayuntamiento de Valencia (2024-04-21). "Juntes Municipals del Ajuntament de València - València". Valencia City Council (in Catalan). Archived from the original on 19 December 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.
  15. ^ "Juntas Municipales Ayuntamiento de Valencia - València". City of Valencia (in Catalan). Archived from the original on 19 December 2024. Retrieved 2024-12-19.