ERC asks the Government that the Constitution includes Valencian civil law

Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya has brought to Congress a non-legal proposal, written in Catalan as well as in Spanish, in which it calls on the Government to modify the second additional provision of the Constitution for the reintegration in the Valencian Community of its own civil law.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
04 October 2023 Wednesday 16:32
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ERC asks the Government that the Constitution includes Valencian civil law

Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya has brought to Congress a non-legal proposal, written in Catalan as well as in Spanish, in which it calls on the Government to modify the second additional provision of the Constitution for the reintegration in the Valencian Community of its own civil law.

Specifically, in the text recorded yesterday Wednesday in the Congress of Deputies, they ask that a reform of the Constitution be promoted to include Valencian civil law in the set of regional rights recognized in the Magna Carta.

It will also be in Congress where the Juristes Valencians association will gather, coinciding with the investiture of Pedro Sánchez, to "demand commitments to the Valencian agenda" and in the face of the "forgetfulness" of the demands of the Valencian Community.

This was announced by the organization a few days ago after regretting "the few references to the Valencian agenda made by the president of the Popular Party during the investiture debate and the total absence of Valencian issues in the interventions of the PSOE and the representatives of Sumar, electoral coalition in which the four Valencian deputies of Compromís-Sumar are attached".

The group is working to organize a concentration of leaders of union, business, festive and cultural groups to "make ourselves heard in Madrid."

"We cannot lose another legislature due to the non-appearance of our politicians in the territorial debate", in view of the fact that Catalan, Basque, Galician, Madrid or Andalusian interests are traditionally well defended by different parliamentary groups, said the president of the legal group, José-Ramón Chirivella.