That is my sincere hope as well. It is so rare to have a majority of the legislative body in sync with the presidential administration. I've got a good feeling that things could really get accomplished within the next few years.
I'm sure you know more about Costa Rican history than your average bear. What many are surprised to learn is that Costa Rica has flip-flopped a time or two between having a bicameral legislative system and the unicameral system we see today. When Costa Rica changed from province to state back in 1823, and became part of the United Provinces of Central America there was the "Federal Congress" which was composed of 1 representative for every 30,000 Costa Ricans and there was also the "Federal Senate" composed of 2 members elected by each of the States. In 1838 a Constituent Assembly was established which maintained the bicameral system (Congress initiated and approved laws and the Senate sanctioned them.) The Political Constitution of 1844 which ended with the coup d'état of June 7, 1846, also established the bicameral system of representatives (like today's diputados) and a senate of not less than 5 members also elected at large. The Political Constitution of 1847 took things back to a unicameral system called "Chamber of Representatives" until the Political Constitution of 1859 which took things back to a bicameral system with the Chamber of Senators composed of 2 senators for each province plus the Chamber of Representatives. That was the rule of law until the Political Constitution of 1871 went back to unicameral with the "Constitutional Congress" comporessed of 43 diputados (1 per 15,000 inhabitants but with the coup d'état of Tomás Guardia Gutiérrez it only became effective in 1882 until the Constitution of 1917 -- and then came back into force in 1948 after the Civil War. The short-lived Political Constitution of 1917 put a bicameral system back in place with a Chamber of Deputies (1 per 20,000 inhabitants) and 3 senators. That stayed in place until the Civil War in 1948 and the Political Constitution of 1949 which established pretty much the unicameral system we have today. The number of diputados was fixed at 45 until such time the population exceeded 1,350,000 inhabitants. In 1961 we got the number of diputados fixed at 57 requiring a 29 diputado majority or a coalition to get things done.
From 1953-1958, the PLN had the majority of the 45 diputados with 30. They lost the majority in 1958 with the rise of the PRN, but the PLN regained the majority in 1962 when the number of diputados went to 57 and kept it until 1974 when we had 8 different parties represented in the Asemblea. In 1982 the PLN once again regained the majority until 1990 when the PUSC took the majority in the Asemblea (1990-1994.) Since the PUSC lost their majority in 1994 we have not had a single party majority rule the Asemblea until today (2026.) It has been awhile! ;-)
Counting the 2 parties that formed the Citizen Action Coalition to present a single candidate (Claudia Dobles Camargo) there were 21 parties fielding a presidential candidate in 2026 and I think 25 parties that fielded diputado candidates. Only 5 parties got seats in the Asemblea this last go around. Partido Pueblo Soberano got 31 seats, PLN a distant 2nd with 17 and Frente Amplio got back up to 7 seats.
My oldest daughter was running around the Asemblea today as the first day of work for the new legislative body. Next week we'll get the new prez.
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Sam