The deputy of Compromís àgueda Micó will leave the parliamentary group to add and become part of the mixed group. Més, the majority partner of the coalition, decides to break the alliance with Yolanda Díaz and the Compromís Unit in the Congress of Deputies after weeks of tension. The consultation of the direction body of the Valencianists, the majority branch of the coalition, has agreed with 92% of votes for the exit of the plurinational group.

205 people from a 230 census have participated in the consultation in which it is the maximum organ of the militancy between congresses. Of these, 190 have reaffirmed the approach of the National Executive, which considers that this is the most appropriate way for the defense of Valencian interests and control the government. The party frames the decision in a context of “corruption within the PSOE”, which they want to disconnect even more. From Més Compecís they consider “more important than ever to use all parliamentary control mechanisms to the government and continue building the honest alternative to bipartisanship.”

The departure will be effective after the next executive of the coalition, where Més and Verds will try to initiative, the only branch that does not want to disconnect, also leave the group. The party of the also deputy Alberto Ibáñez has been reluctant to date on the idea of ​​breaking with adding, in order to weave an alliance in upcoming elections, and appealing to the unity of the left. This formation unanimously ratified staying in the plurinational group. This Monday, after knowing Més’ decision, the party has insisted on its desire to stay in the plurinational group, delving into the break. “It is not the time to dwarf spaces or patriotism of the acronym, but to expand plural alliances from the set of the left to contribute hope, security and ethics to the complex moment we live,” they indicate.

The decision of Més and Initiative leaves the Compromís coalition against an unprecedented scenario, departed in half in the Congress of Deputies, and tests the strength of the coalition. The trigger for the rupture was the veto of adding to the list of appearing parties in the Dana commission proposed by Compromís, which includes the president of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, and has not registered as the Valencianists demanded. Numerous leaders consider this a disloyalty by the left platform with which they attended the elections and see in it the drop that fills the glass after two years of unfulfilled expectations.

This Monday, the leader of Més and regional deputy Joan Baldoví has ​​advocated “defending much better” his positions “from outside” to add; Especially “at this time with which all this of the PSOE is leaving”, in reference to the ‘Koldo Case’ in which an alleged plot of public works contracts in exchange for commissions is investigated. “We want to maintain full autonomy when making our decisions and making our votes and our parliamentary work,” he defended, and has guaranteed that, once the result of the consultation is known, the National Consell of Més will decide “the steps to take in the next few days.”

Source: www.eldiario.es



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