Puerto del Rosario (Fuerteventura) (EFE) the agreements made by the Island Government Council since it was only made up of two people, the two of them.
The requirement came after the Canarian Coalition denounced before the Government Delegation that Government Councils were being held, since December 30, in which the minimum quorum of three people required by the Organic Regulation of the Cabildo de Fuerteventura (ROF).
The situation stemmed from a government crisis that began on December 13 when Lloret decided to dismiss the seven councilors of the Canary Islands Coalition and, days later, the four of the Popular Party decided to leave the government team.
From then on, government councils began to be held with only two members: Sergio Lloret and Juan Nicolás Cabrera, both elected from the Fuerteventura Municipal Assemblies (AMF) lists.
The requirement of the Government Delegation gave one month to annul the agreements or to prove that they were based on law. “We have requested reports from the legal services, they have made us a proposal and we have decided in the Governing Council to reject the Delegation’s proposal”, explained the president.
A decision, he continued explaining, based on “the legal criteria of the body that says the law that has to advise the Governing Council, which are the legal services of the insular institution.”
In the request, Lloret specified at a press conference, the agreements were requested to be annulled unless “it was proven that it was not legally necessary. What we have done is accredit it to the Government delegate”.
“The legal services of the Cabildo understand that the agreements made by the Governing Council are perfectly valid and conform to the law,” he indicated.
On the other hand, Lloret has commented that he asked the Government delegate, Anselmo Pestana, who, as an interested party, “transfer all the information regarding the complaint” and if his request “was based on a legal report from the Government Delegation or the State Attorney’s Office.
The Government Delegation has replied that the complaint was formulated by CC and that “there was no report in the proposal that expressed the approach it made”.
Sergio Lloret has opined that this issue has more to do with “political strategy than anything else” and has argued that neither he nor his colleague Cabrera have encouraged the creation of a government team with only two people.
The president of the Cabildo has denounced that, after the dismissal of the nationalist advisers, the Popular Party could have continued “quietly governing, but they preferred to jump off the ship to try to sink it.”
The PP presented an appeal for replacement of the agreements made in the Governing Council with two members. Lloret requested a legal report from the legal department of the Cabildo, which agreed to dismiss the popular appeal.
The Majorero president has accused the PP of trying to block the institution, a decision that he has described as “true irresponsibility”, and of making decisions agreed with CC “only to try to sink the ship”.
In addition, he has insisted that legal decisions correspond to the courts. In this sense, he recalled that there are three Supreme Court rulings that validate agreements made with two members.
Now the agreement of the Governing Council will be certified and the Government Delegation will be notified. EFE