He intends to fine companies that left Catalonia due to the 2017 coup

Sánchez has put Spain in the hands of a totalitarian who dreams of a dictatorship

Today we Spaniards have had a clear preview of what this legislature is going to be like, which began with the infamous pact between socialists and separatists.

TREASON: Pedro Sánchez hands over Spain and the rule of law to the fugitive Puigdemont
The Spanish Judiciary describes the pact between the PSOE and Puigdemont as “a flagrant attack on the separation of powers”

They intend to fine companies that left Catalonia due to the 2017 coup

This Tuesday marks two months of that pact, which means one of the greatest threats to the rule of law that Spain has experienced in its current democratic regime. Far from remitting this threat, what we have seen in recent hours only confirms the worst fears: Junts separatists have demanded that Sánchez fine companies for leaving Catalonia as a consequence of the separatist coup of October 2017, a coup led precisely by the fugitive Carles Puigdemont, leader of Together.

A nonsense that attacks the freedom of business protected by the Constitution

Junts' demand for Sánchez is nonsense, as Vox has rightly said. Let us remember that Article 38 of the Constitution recognizes the freedom of business within the framework of the market economy. Thus, a Spanish company has complete freedom to establish itself wherever it wishes or move to another community or even to another country. Trying to fine a company for moving from Catalonia to another region is a proposal as totalitarian as trying to fine someone from Catalonia for going to live in Madrid, or vice versa. Given what we have seen, it is worth wondering if this will be the next thing that Junts demands, a party whose leaders already exhibited their anti-democratic attitude during the aforementioned separatist coup in 2017.

The government avoids rejecting the totalitarian demand of Junts

The most astonishing thing is not that a coup plotter does and says things typical of a coup plotter. That is already within the foreseeable. The unusual thing is that the Sánchez's government has not rejected Junts' demand, generating uncertainty that is lethal for the image of Spain. The Socialist Party (PSOE) has become a hostage of a totalitarian who dreams of a dictatorship (remember, in fact, that in the USSR a permit, the propiska, was required to be able to move from one place to another) and now we Spaniards are going to suffer the consequences.

This could cause a flight of investors from Spain

When a government's ally spouts nonsense like the one Puigdemont's party has launched today and the government does not reject it outright, the message that is sent to investors could be summarized by quoting Gandalf: "Fly, you fools!" What businessman in his right mind will settle in a country whose government does not reject kidnapping companies through fines? With the nonsense of these apprentice dictators, not only will investors not come but we also risk experiencing a flight of companies like the one that Catalonia suffered in 2017, but at a national level.

This should also serve as a reflection for those who believe that Junts is a right-wing party. Rather, Junts has shown to have approaches typical of the extreme communist left, which is the tendency of many of the separatist movements in Spain. A predictable trend: of those who exhibit their totalitarian character by imposing regional languages, imposing indoctrination in schools, pointing out and attacking those who do not share their separatist dogmas and a long etcetera, is it possible? expect them to be less totalitarian in the economic sphere?

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Photo: Europa Press.

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