The PP will repeal the amnesty law when it has a majority in Congress to do so, according to what the PP spokesperson, Borja Sémper, assured this Monday at a press conference, in response to questions from the media, being the first time that a leader popular admits this possibility, which according to experts would not have any practical consequences for people who had been amnestied based on the law currently being processed by Congress.

Sémper assured, when asked about this possibility, that “when we have a majority in Congress we will repeal the amnesty law, of course,” after remembering that the debate, this week, in Congress, of the entire amendments to the law It assumes that Pedro Sánchez’s partners “are going through cash,” and give urgency to a law that is only urgent for Sánchez.

Until now, the leaders of the PP did not confirm this possibility, which is not included in the amendment to the entirety presented to the PSOE amnesty law proposal, which was the condition of the Catalan independentists to vote for Sánchez’s investiture. The last time I had asked Alberto Núñez Feijóo about it, his response was “I have faith in the Spanish and European courts and jurisdictional forums.”

For the PP spokesperson, with this law, the PSOE, “begins the year by betraying itself, its voters and the Spanish,” to whom he said there would be no amnesty, and that is why the PP has presented an amendment to the of the project, “to protect the rule of law against the blows to the Constitution” that the independentists intend to inflict, and so that “constitutional loyalty does not come free.”

This amendment to the entirety, in addition to establishing the dissolution of parties that promote acts of constitutional disloyalty, such as the calling of a referendum, establishes that such a call would be a crime, something that in the opinion of the PP “only bothers those who want to put in check The rule of law”.