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The Government will appeal the Law of Concord of Extremadura to the Constitutional Court
Spain🏛️ PoliticsCenter7 hr. ago

The Government will appeal the Law of Concord of Extremadura to the Constitutional Court

The Spanish central government has decided to appeal the 'Concordia Law' of Extremadura before the Constitutional Court, arguing that it undermines the national democratic memory law. The law, passed last year by the regional assembly with support from the People's Party (PP) and Vox, repealed the previous regional legislation on democratic memory. The ruling was opposed by the PSOE and Unidas por Extremadura, who viewed it as revisionist and disrespectful to victims of Franco. The central government claims the law omits references to Franco-era repression, avoids sanctions for destroying mass graves, and excludes discussions on gender perspectives and LGBTQ+ issues. The government has previously challenged similar laws in other regions like the Balearic Islands and Valencia, asserting they fail to uphold rights to truth, justice, and non-repetition. Negotiations between Madrid and Extremadura failed, prompting the central government to pursue legal action.

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2 reports

infoLibre logoinfoLibreIndependentCenter7 hr. ago
The Government appeals to the Law of Concord of Extremadura for invading its competences

The Spanish central government has filed a constitutional challenge against the 'Concordia Law' passed by the regional government of Extremadura. The challenge argues that the law encroaches on federal competencies and reduces protections for victims under the National Memory Law, which guarantees rights such as truth, reparations, and non-repetition of past injustices. The central government claims the law undermines institutional collaboration and violates constitutional provisions by regulating matters reserved for the state. In contrast, the regional government defends the law as a step toward social peace and reconciliation, emphasizing its commitment to recognizing all victims. The case highlights tensions between national and regional authorities over historical accountability and governance responsibilities.

Bias read (Center): While both sides present strong arguments—central government asserting constitutional authority and regional government advocating for victim recognition—the article presents balanced reporting without overt ideological slant. It includes direct quotes from both the central government’s legal stance

infoLibre logoinfoLibreIndependentCenteryesterday
The Government will appeal the Law of Concord of Extremadura to the Constitutional Court

The Spanish central government has decided to appeal the 'Concordia Law' of Extremadura before the Constitutional Court, arguing that it undermines the national democratic memory law. The law, passed last year by the regional assembly with support from the People's Party (PP) and Vox, repealed the previous regional legislation on democratic memory. The ruling was opposed by the PSOE and Unidas por Extremadura, who viewed it as revisionist and disrespectful to victims of Franco. The central government claims the law omits references to Franco-era repression, avoids sanctions for destroying mass graves, and excludes discussions on gender perspectives and LGBTQ+ issues. The government has previously challenged similar laws in other regions like the Balearic Islands and Valencia, asserting they fail to uphold rights to truth, justice, and non-repetition. Negotiations between Madrid and Extremadura failed, prompting the central government to pursue legal action.

Bias read (Center): While the article presents the central government’s stance against the law as a violation of national democratic memory principles, it also includes balanced reporting on opposition views from regional parties and historical context. There is no clear ideological slant in the framing of the issue,尽管

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