"After the storm comes the calm".

It is the horizon, almost rather a desire, that this Tuesday was expressed in La Moncloa.

Spain is plunged into an "institutional crisis" as they admit in the Executive, after the Constitutional Court halted, at the request of a PP appeal, a legal reform promoted by the Government still in parliamentary proceedings, that is, not approved by the Cuts.

The setback surprised the presidential complex as unexpected.

Although they have been working on plans b for days, they did not expect the decision.

Government and courts abide by the decision, but Pedro Sánchez is determined to renew the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ) and overturn the conservative majority in the Constitutional Court (TC).

For it,

"Tranquillity";

"You have to wait a few days" are trying in La Moncloa to get some respite in the face of an "unprecedented" crisis.

In the Government they want to read well the document of the Constitutional Court that knocks down its legal reform to change precisely the Constitutional and, above all, the individual votes that there are.

But the decision is clear: to overcome the blockade of the PP through a new parliamentary initiative, state government sources.

As this newspaper has been reporting, the most plausible way for the Government is to present a bill through the PSOE and Unidas Podemos, something that parliamentary sources confirm to EL MUNDO that it will be done this week and, specifically, on Thursday.

At least, that is what the socialists have transferred.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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