Spain's main parties agree on renewing constitutional court judges
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[October 14, 2021]
MADRID (Reuters) -Spain's ruling
Socialist party has reached a deal with the main opposition People's
Party to renew the line-up of the Constitutional Court, paving the way
to ending a years-long stalemate, the prime minister's office said on
Thursday.
The approval of the judges for the 12-strong top court, a third of whom
had reached the end of their nine-year term over the past two years,
requires a three-fifths majority in parliament, which would be
impossible without the conservative PP.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez is head of a minority leftist coalition
government. In Spain's polarised political landscape, there are very few
agreements between the two main parties.
A vote will take place in the week of Oct. 25 but will not include the
renewal of the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ), the judges'
ruling body, which has been blocked for three years, precluding the
appointment of new judges to higher courts.
The renewal of the CGPJ would trigger a cascading replacement of the
heads of the Supreme Court and other high courts.
The two parties also agreed on renewing top jobs at the Ombudsman's
office, the Audit Court and the National Data Protection Agency,
Sanchez's office said in a statement.
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The Spanish Constitutional Court building is seen in Madrid, Spain,
September 6, 2017. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Sanchez's coalition government with the left-wing
Unidas Podemos took the reins in early 2020 after about five years
of political instability with frequent elections and has since
managed to return Spain to relative institutional normality.
The agreement with the PP comes at a time when the government is
seeking support for the budget bill for 2022, which promised a
record 40 billion euros ($46 billion) of state funds on investments
as EU payments to support the economy's robust post-pandemic
recovery kick in.
Last year, the government managed to approve the budget despite the
PP's vote against.
(Reporting by Belen Carreno and Inti Landauro; editing by Andrei
Khalip and Steve Orlofsky)
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