MADRID, 4 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) –

The Finnish Chancellor of Justice, who examines alleged illegal practices of members of the Government, has ruled out that the private parties held by the Prime Minister, Sanna Marin, were any irregularity and has left it to Parliament to analyze any possible moral derivative of said celebrations.

The broadcast of some videos in August led Marin to get out of the way of doubts about his conduct. The 36-year-old prime minister defended her right to have fun in private and even took a drug test to prove that she had not used any illegal substances.

The Chancellor of Justice has explained in his final report that these were actions carried out by Marin in his spare time and that none of the complaints filed “specifically” linked the parties as a possible omission of official duties of the position of prime minister.

Thus, “he has no reason to suspect that the prime minister has committed an illegal action (…) or has failed to fulfill her duty”, highlighting that the investigations have focused on examining the political and not the moral derivative of the case. The Chancellor recalled that, in a parliamentary system such as Finland’s, this second variable is the responsibility of the legislative power.