1931 Spanish local elections
The 1931 Spanish local elections were held on 12 April throughout all municipalities in Spain to elect 80,472 councillors. The elections were perceived as a plebiscite on the monarchy of Alfonso XIII. After republican parties and their allies came away with a convincing victory, the king left the country and the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed. A provisional government was formed shortly thereafter, with national elections scheduled for later in the year.
Background
Since 1923, Spain had been a dictatorship under Miguel Primo de Rivera with the approval of Alfonso XIII, the reigning monarch at the time. After the fall of the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera and the failure of his successor, Dámaso Berenguer, to establish another dictatorship, the new cabinet appointed by the king in 1931 decided to hold new local elections for the first time in nine years. Although they were local elections, they were perceived as a plebiscite on the Spanish monarchy, as no national elections or polls had been held since 1923.Electoral system
The number of seats of each council was determined by the population count. According to the 1877 municipal law, the population-seat relationship on each municipality was to be established on the following scale:| Population | Seats | Population | Seats | Population | Seats | ||
| <500 | 6 | 16,001–18,000 | 21 | 55,001–60,000 | 36 | ||
| 501–800 | 7 | 18,001–20,000 | 22 | 60,001–65,000 | 37 | ||
| 801–1,000 | 8 | 20,001–22,000 | 23 | 65,001–70,000 | 38 | ||
| 1,001–2,000 | 9 | 22,001–24,000 | 24 | 70,001–75,000 | 39 | ||
| 2,001–3,000 | 10 | 24,001–26,000 | 25 | 75,001–80,000 | 40 | ||
| 3,001–4,000 | 11 | 26,001–28,000 | 26 | 80,001–85,000 | 41 | ||
| 4,001–5,000 | 12 | 28,001–30,000 | 27 | 85,001–90,000 | 42 | ||
| 5,001–6,000 | 13 | 30,001–32,000 | 28 | 90,001–95,000 | 43 | ||
| 6,001–7,000 | 14 | 32,001–34,000 | 29 | 95,001–100,000 | 44 | ||
| 7,001–8,000 | 15 | 34,001–36,000 | 30 | 100,001–120,000 | 45 | ||
| 8,001–9,000 | 16 | 36,001–38,000 | 31 | 120,001–140,000 | 46 | ||
| 9,001–10,000 | 17 | 38,001–40,000 | 32 | 140,001–160,000 | 47 | ||
| 10,001–12,000 | 18 | 40,001–45,000 | 33 | 160,001–180,000 | 48 | ||
| 12,001–14,000 | 19 | 45,001–50,000 | 34 | 180,001–200,000 | 49 | ||
| 14,001–16,000 | 20 | 50,001–55,000 | 35 | >200,001 | 50 |
The 1907 election law established that councillors should be elected in districts consisting of 4 members, although 3 to 7 member districts were also allowed. Voters had to choose multiple candidates using limited voting, which allows a voter to vote for fewer candidates than members have to be elected. Candidates winning a plurality of votes in each district were elected. If the number of candidates was equal or fewer than the number of seats to be filled, candidates were automatically proclaimed without an election. Voting was compulsory and on the basis of universal manhood suffrage, with males over twenty-five and at least a two-year residency in a municipality required to vote. Mayors were elected indirectly by the city or town council on the first session after the election.
Results
Overall results
The results shown were extracted from the 1931 Spanish Statistical Annuary.Results showed a win of republicans by a large margin in Asturias, Aragon, and Catalonia. Monarchists got their best results in the Balearic Islands, Andalusia, and Extremadura. The republicans had a majority in more than four-fifths of the provincial capitals. In the city of Barcelona, the largest city by that time, they obtained more than the 75% of the seats. These were the results in the province capitals plus Ceuta and Melilla: