Grand and General Council
The Grand and General Council is the unicameral parliament of San Marino. The council has 60 members elected for a five-year term.
History
From the 5th century, San Marino was ruled by an assembly composed by all the family heads known as the Arengo. However, as the population grew, such a body became more and more dysfunctional, with its functioning being crippled by feuds between families.While the exact timing is unknown, there is historical evidence that by the early 13th century, the citizens of San Marino elected an assembly called Council of the LX, which was also known as the Grand and General Council. In this first stage the power was shared between the Arengo and the Council, with the latter gaining more and more power over the centuries. This process culminated in the Statutes of 1600, which defined the Council as the "supreme, absolute and only prince" of the community, attributing to it "the right over life, death and goods of every citizen" together with every power needed to rule and manage the country.
Until the 17th century, members of the Council were periodically elected by the Arengo, then the Statutes of 1600 established that the Council could autonomously nominate its members by co-optation. This led to an increasing concentration of power in the hand of the richest families, which were also the only ones that could afford to pay for the necessary education. The oligarchic nature of the council became even clearer when, between the 17th and 18th centuries, laws were passed to formally establish a noble class with 20 seats reserved to it.
This situation ended on 25 March 1906 when the Arengo was summoned once again after centuries and in which householders were asked whether the system of co-option of councillors for life should continue. The proposal was rejected by 90.65% of voters, consequently, the country's first modern election was conducted on 10 June 1906.
During the fascist period, between 1923 and 1943, the Grand and General Council was dissolved and a new legislature called the Prince and Sovereign Council was formed, with all its 60 members belonging to the Sammarinese Fascist Party.
Suffrage was extended to women in 1959, granting to them the possibility to vote for the first time in the 1964 elections.