The Bureau Blocks Election Amendments Without Consulting Congressional Lawyers
36 Articles
36 Articles
This Thursday, in the Congress of Deputies, it is not that there was an elephant in the room. It is that it was in the Chamber, bars included, and its presence was evident despite the efforts of the Government to curtail the parliamentary debate. On Tuesday, without a formal meeting and with a mere round of calls from the president of the Lower House, socialist Francina Armengol, to the rest of the members of the Bureau, the PSOE and Sumar vetoe…
The PP does not resign and will take to the Constitutional Court the veto of the PSOE and Sumar in Congress to the vote of a motion to demand that Pedro Sánchez call elections. Both PP and Junts promoted on Tuesday a text to force this debate in the House, but PSOE and Sumar, who have a majority in the Congressional Bureau, prevented it, something that Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s party considers a “democratic outrage.” Continue reading...
The government has an increasingly precarious situation in the plenary of Congress, in which it is already unable to articulate certain majorities. But it maintains a firm control of the organs of government of the House. The Bureau and, logically, the Presidency, which Francina Armengol exercises with an absolute submission to the orders of La Moncloa, seem put there to block any initiative that could disturb Pedro Sánchez.
Two seconds have been the germ of one of the biggest broncs that the PP has extinguished Armengol in a control session, the two seconds that left Feijóo to reply to Sánchez in his face and that the president of the Congress has not considered relevant to exhaust. The socialist came to veto with questionable arguments two amendments of the PP and Junts to avoid that it was staged that the majority that took Sánchez to the Moncloa today turns his …
The Senate plenary plans to vote next Thursday, June 24, on a PP motion urging the...
The Upper House will vote on the initiative, word for word to the one presented on Tuesday by Junts, on June 24, the same day Pedro Sánchez appears in the Lower House to talk about corruption cases

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