SPAIN'S GOVERNMENT ASKS COURT TO STRIKE DOWN CATALAN REFERENDUM LAW
SPAIN'S GOVERNMENT ASKS COURT TO
STRIKE DOWN CATALAN REFERENDUM LAW
Spain’s government has asked the
Spanish constitutional court to declare void a referendum law that Catalonia’s separatist government
is expected to pass later on Wednesday, Spain’s deputy prime minister said.
Soraya Saenz de
Santamaria said Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy had asked the court to challenge
the law, which will approve a referendum on Catalan independence on Oct. 1,
since the law goes against previous rulings.
“What is happening
in the Catalan parliament is embarrassing, it’s shameful,” Saenz de Santamaria
told reporters in Madrid.
Catalan lawmakers are due to
vote on laws approving the referendum and the legal framework to set up an
independent state. The laws will likely be approved because pro-independence
parties have a majority in the regional parliament.

Carry dey go
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