The Jeltzales assure that the transfer has already been recorded in law and that the building is already in their hands.
The PNV has stated that the non-validation of the omnibus decree, which included the transfer to the Basque nationalists of the ownership of the Parisian mansion, currently the headquarters of the Cervantes Institute, does not nullify its transfer, so that the building “already in the hands” of the Jeltzale formation.
The party chaired by Andoni Ortuzar has spoken in this way after PP, Junts and Vox announced their vote against the omnibus decree law, which will be rejected this Wednesday during the plenary session of Congress.
PNV sources have stated that the non-validation of a legal decree entails “the immediate termination of its effects and its withdrawal”, but not the annulment of the consequences incurred during its validity. As they noted, the transfer is already established in law -ope legis-, and it is an act that “has already been perfected (completed).”
Moreover, they have insisted that, “for further legal information”, the comments published by Congress on Article 86 of the Spanish Constitution state that “non-validation does not entail the loss of retroactive validity of the standard.”
For this reason, the Jeltzale party maintains that the decree law “has been in force from its entry into force until the next publication in the BOE of its repeal.”
The PNV also refers to what the lawyer of the Cortes Generales, professor of administrative law, Ignacio Astarloa, said in his ‘Theory and practice of the decree-law in the Spanish system’.
In this sense, the PNV celebrates that, “despite the unfounded resistance, justice has been done” and that the building on Marceau Avenue, “seized by the Gestapo and later occupied by the Franco regime, is in the hands of its legitimate owner. “
Source: EITB

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.