Four of the six parties represented in the Valencian Parliament are willing to change the Electoral Law and lower the turnout bar from 5% to 3%. The total of them is 65 votes, but no formation wants to take the step of knocking on the door of one of the 6 deputies. non-member group. One of five ex-Ciudadanos and one ex-Vox is necessary to tip the balance in favor of a claim by Botà nic, which has been on the table since time immemorial.
Citizen’s Attorney Mother PerisAfter his meeting with the president, he gathered up the discussion Ximo Puigbut the re-established orange party, which is now closed to adding one of its former members to the bid.
With the motto “Do not negotiate with the fugitives,” the formation sends the message that it is willing to reclaim its position in 2015 and join the necessary qualified majority that requires reform of this magnitude.
Peris called the 5% limit “unfair” yesterday and attacked Carlos Mazon for refusing. “He is a fragile leader and nervous,” he assured the leader of the PP, who had expressed his opposition to changing the rules of the game at the end of the game hours earlier in Madrid.
PP’s rejection overlaps with Vox’s. Presidential candidate yesterday Carlos Flores called “alarming maneuvers” contrary to European provisions. The law professor specifically mentioned the norm that prevents the election laws from being changed in the year the polls are opened.
On the other hand, as Peris recalls, Ciudadanos also included an offer to bet on the creation of a unique postage that saves costs for voters, in his statements in the corridors of the Valencian Courts.
insufficient yes
On the other hand, PSPV, Commitment And Combine We Can They continue to support the initiative, but saying yes seems insufficient to bring about change. While the bruises may have benefited the most from the measure, the truth is that no one has officially taken action.
While the Presidency denies that the negotiations have begun to seek the lost vote, and claims that it is affiliated with the socialist Cortes through the mouths of the deputy general secretary, ana DominguezThey replied with the same argument. “We are not in negotiations,” he assured, which does not mean that the party is open to supporting the proposal.
On behalf of CompromÃs, he was his assistant. Joseph Nadal expressing themselves in similar terms. “Historically we are in favor of this because we are in a multi-party society,” he commented. “The 5 percent threshold is not democratic,” he said.
However, both have left the door open for speeding up deadlines for the legislature to enter its final plenary session, which has yet to be dated. According to the working rules of the Valencian Parliament, the margin they have is the Board of Trustees, from which the order of the plenary session is determined and this meeting is usually held one week before the plenary session. So there is margin; however, the attitude expressed by botanical formations is in the opposite direction.
The declarations made the proposal quite emotional and it is unlikely to come out, but it is still mathematically possible. You can change a ribbon showing the parliamentary entrance by both time and voting. 150,000 votes. Ciudadanos and CompromÃs underlined this figure yesterday at the crossroads of the Autonomous Assembly’s headquarters again.
Rearview mirror of elections
On May 28, more than three million citizens are called to vote and the latest polls are held. Combine We Can at the 5% limit. Some underestimate a rushed entry and others leave it out. Worse still is the starting point of Ciudadanos, whose estimates are below that bar.
How the parliamentary arch was ultimately formed would change a lot if the Valencia electoral law adopted the 3%, a figure already in most regional parliaments.
From Botà nic matches, what was seen, Mamen Peris’s suggestion is more of a gain visibility for an amendment to come into effect, which has faced denial of the right from the beginning of the legislature.
Source: Informacion

Emma Matthew is a political analyst for “Social Bites”. With a keen understanding of the inner workings of government and a passion for politics, she provides insightful and informative coverage of the latest political developments.