The leader of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, has ignored the presentation of the Constitutional Court known on Sunday night that supports the constitutionality core of the Amnesty Law. Despite the thesis of the Court of Guarantees, the maximum interpreter of the Constitution, still pending a ruling, Feijóo insists on the unconstitutionality of the norm that forgave the Catalan independence. “Today they intend to convince us that buying a government with privileges is legal,” said the PP leader in an act in Cáceres. “I say no. Nor is it ethical, nor is it moral, nor is it legal. It is unconstitutional because all experts in this country have said. The lawyers of the Senate, of the Congress, the General Council of the Judiciary, the most prestigious constitutionalists … They have said that the amnesty is immoral,” said Feijóo, oblivious to the hierarchy of the Constitutional Court as a supreme interpreter of the Constitution.
Before, the national spokesman of the popular, Borja Sémper, has defended that “regardless of what the Constitutional Court rules, the amnesty law is a deep immorality that will not change anything, a ruling of the constitutional.” Although the Court of Guarantees endorses the constitutionality core of the norm against which the PP manifested up to half a dozen occasions, the popular insist that the amnesty “is a political payment and is an indecency.” “It is still our position. Constitutional or unconstitutional, it is political corruption,” said the popular spokesman.
The general secretary of the PP, Cuca Gamarra, has seen in the draft of the sentence one of the “many reasons” that the Spaniards have to concentrate against the president of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, this Sunday in the Plaza de España in Madrid.
Gamarra has insisted that the amnesty is “the instrument” with which Sánchez “bought” his investiture and “began this legislature.” And now, almost two years later, he has denounced that “part of the government” is dedicated to “chasing those who chase criminals”, in reference “to the dirty war” headed by Leire Díez, a militant of the PSOE collects Servimedia.
“This is Sanchismo, so there are many reasons for next Sunday at 11 in the morning, we mobilize all those who believe that this has to end and that we deserve a decent government and another way of directing Spain,” he said. The number two of the PP, however, has not ruled on the bottom of the draft because, as it is “logical”, it has not had access to it.