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Two years have passed since Pedro Sánchez, general secretary of the PSOE, and Pablo Iglesias, then general secretary of Unidas Podemos, signed a pre-agreement to form the first coalition government in the democratic history of Spain. Then they merged into an iconic hug. However, two years ago the current political landscape was unimaginable. Although the emergence of new formations in the Congress of Deputies back in 2014 gave a dizzying look to Spanish politics, the fact that PSOE and Unidas Podemos managed to form an agreement at the beginning of 2020 has not calmed the waters. Two years ago, for example, it was not possible to foresee that terms such as PERTE , Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan, coronavirus , Next Generation funds or pandemic would be used today. The health crisis that broke out in March of last year has disrupted the Executive's plans. The Executive itself has changed.
First in May, when Pablo Iglesias surprisingly announced that he was leaving politics after leaving his second vice presidency and his Ministry of Social Rights and Agenda 2030 to attend the early elections of the Community of Madrid, in which he could not beat Malaysia WhatsApp Number List Isabel Díaz Ayuso. Higher and reviewable contributions to pay for the retirement of the 'baby boom' generation Then, a few months later, when overnight Sánchez himself announced changes in the ministries that correspond to the PSOE with the firm intention of creating an even more equal and young Executive ( it is one of the youngest in all of Europe ) . However, what does not change is what remains in writing. The pre-agreement for the coalition government was announced on November 12, 2019, while the final agreement arrived a couple of weeks later. A document of about 50 pages with dozens of commitments that have guided government action since then.
In fact, in mid-2020 it was Sánchez himself who assured that of the 428 commitments that were included in the coalition agreement, more than 55% had already been activated , and he expected that by the end of 2020, 17.3% would have been fulfilled. . At the end of that year he defended that 23% had been met. In the middle of 2021, Sánchez pointed out that compliance with the commitments had already risen to 33% and that 61% of them had already been activated. It doesn't work out for Noel Bandera, a jurist, political scientist and sociologist who made his own calculations in this article , yielding a compliance figure of only 23% as of last August. Nor to a verifier that follows the agreement prepared by the production company Newtral , which today summarizes compliance at another 23%, non-compliance at 1%, active commitments at 52% and those pending novelty at 24%. Be that as it may, now that the halfway point of the legislature is approaching, the Government has still not fulfilled all of its commitments.
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