
EU Parliament To Investigate Spanish Amnesty Law
The parliament could send a delegation to Spain to investigate rule-of-law violations by PM Pedro Sánchez.
The parliament could send a delegation to Spain to investigate rule-of-law violations by PM Pedro Sánchez.
Socialist PM Pedro Sánchez’s first bills are set to be defeated—by his allies.
This movement shows “there is still a spirit of reconquest, of returning to what Spain was—and not allowing it to become something else entirely.”
The political class wants to demoralize opponents, disenfranchise citizens, and demonstrate power.
Five-year legal deadlock could be resolved at the expense of sovereignty.
The Spanish PM allowed only 20 minutes for questions from six hand-picked news outlets in what should have been the biggest press conference of the year.
Pedro Sánchez’s socialist government will have expensive delicacies and a €2 million catering budget for official flights.
Addressing the Spanish PM directly, the head of the centrist European People’s Party said, “It is obvious that this is about you, about your career, not about Spain or Europe.”
The meeting abroad would be a victory for the separatists as it gives the appearance of bilateral negotiations between two heads of state.
The Spanish PM was hauled over the coals by both centrists and conservatives over his deal with Catalan separatists.