07-01-2019 | Cs

The secretary general of Cs regrets the 'sectarian and violent attitudes' at the Pride celebrations and announces that the GPCs will present this week the Law on Substitute Gestation.

"We have an uncontrolled government in office because Batet keeps the Congress paralyzed," said the Secretary General of Citizens (Cs), José Manuel Villegas, who recalled that neither the commissions nor the Permanent Deputation have been set up. "Let Sanchez start to negotiate seriously with his partners and form a government," the orange deputy asked. He explained that "it is in Sánchez's DNA and in his vision of politics to agree with nationalists and separatists."

"The old parties are not so different because PSOE and the PP are mimicked when they are in power," criticized the liberal deputy. Villegas has announced that the Parliamentary Group of Citizens (GPCs) will ask the Congress table to "comply with the ruling of the Constitutional Court that says that the government in office must also be supervised by the legislature."

Villegas has announced that this week Citizens will present this week the Law on Surrogate Gestation. He has also criticized the "unfortunate events" that have occurred this weekend in the party of vindication for equality and non-discrimination of the LGTBI collective. The general secretary of Cs has lamented the "sectarian and violent attitudes" against members of the party and has reminded that the liberal party will continue to participate as it does every year "because we share the demand and make it manifest in the daily life of Ciudadanos".

After the Standing Committee of Citizens, the general secretary of Cs has also reviewed the status of government pacts as in Murcia where an agreement has already been reached with the PP. Villegas stressed that in Castilla y León is expected to sign an agreement in Valladolid to "apply orange policies" and thus "end customer service and chiringuitos." Regarding Madrid, he stressed that "progress is being made in the program and structure of the Government" and, once the agreement is reached, "the other parties will have to decide whether to block and impede the Government".



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