The PP ignores the dissolution of parties in its partial amendments to suppress the amnesty law

All the information about the amnesty law in this EL PERIÓDICO special.

The amnesty law promoted by the PSOE to ensure the support from Junts and ERC The investiture of Pedro Sánchez continues its parliamentary process. After the phase of the amendments to the entirety, completed a few days ago, this Tuesday the phase of the amendments was completed partial. At six in the afternoon the deadline to register them ended and, in addition to those of the socialist group and the independentists, who are the ones who have some options to leave, the PP has presented its own, although it knows that success will be nil.

The popular ones have registered about twenty amendments to delete each of the precepts of the bill individually because they consider the norm “clearly unconstitutional.”

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In the amendment to the entirety of two weeks ago that the PP presented without success a few days ago, proposed, among others changes in the Penal Code, that the call for an illegal independence referendum would be punished with the dissolution of the political party that proposed it and that whoever declared independence could go to prison for between 5 and 10 years. Now, in the partial amendments, the party has forgotten these proposals and has opted for deletion amendments.

The proposal to dissolve political formations, an extreme that Mariano Rajoy’s PP did not consider at the height of the ‘procés’, in 2017, caused a stir that led Alberto Núñez Feijóo himself to put on the brakes. The leader of the popular party said that he was open to leaving the dissolution only for “very aggravated” cases. Party sources later explained that they were considering presenting a bill with his proposal later, outside of the debate on the amnesty law.

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