Gamarra assures that it was a “private visit” and supports the decision of the Royal House to inform as it deems “appropriate”

MADRID, 24 May. (EUROPA PRESS) –

The general secretary of the PP and spokesperson for the Popular Group in Congress, Cuca Gamarra, has assured this Tuesday that it is up to the king emeritus to decide whether or not he wants to live in Spain and has recalled that Juan Carlos I has “no pending cause”.

“The king emeritus is a Spaniard who does not have any pending cases and who can decide and make his decisions freely. And he will decide whether or not he wants to live in his country,” Gamarra said, when asked how he values ??that he could definitely return to Spain.

In a press conference in Congress, after the meeting of the Board of Spokespersons, Gamarra has indicated that it will be Juan Carlos I who “will decide if he wants to live or not in his country.” “We have nothing more to say. The freedom of movement and the freedom and fundamental rights that the Constitution protects us with are absolutely for everyone,” he said.

As for whether the statement issued last night by the Royal House on the King Emeritus’s visit to Spain seems sufficient, Gamarra has indicated that the PP thinks the decision made by the Royal House is “correct”. “It is up to them to communicate the visit of the emeritus king as they deem appropriate and also responds to a private visit,” he said.

According to that statement, Felipe VI and the king emeritus had the opportunity to review “different events and their consequences in Spanish society” during the last two years in the meeting they held before his return to Abu Dhabi. In addition, Zarzuela recalled that Don Juan Carlos promised to keep his visits and residence private when he traveled to Spain.

When asked how she values ??the information that is being published about Felipe VI having transferred his father who cannot return to Spain yet, Gamarra pointed out that these are conversations that she has not “heard” and that “affect nothing more and nothing less than the head of state”.

“Therefore, of what is published about which we do not have first-hand information, we cannot value it, nor should we value it, nor are we going to value it,” Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s ‘number two’ has settled.