BRUSELAS, 19 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) –

The Second Vice President of the Government and Minister of Labor and Social Economy, Yolanda Díaz, assured this Wednesday that the agreement between PSOE and United We Can to form the General Council of the Judiciary will be fulfilled, including members proposed by the ‘purple’ formation.

In statements from Brussels, where she is taking part in the Tripartite Social Summit with European unions and employers, the vice-president has been “convinced” that the negotiations to renew the governing body of the judges will come to fruition, at the same time that she has said that the agreements signed between United We Can and PSOE “are going to be fulfilled”.

Likewise, the second vice president has charged against the PP for extending the blockade of the CGPJ for four years. “The PP should never have abandoned the institutional framework. It seems to me that it has been very serious that in four years the judicial institutions par excellence have been beaten,” she lamented.

In any case, Yolanda Díaz has welcomed the ‘popular’ to agree on its renewal and contribute to the “rebalancing” of the judicial bodies.

Of course, he has avoided giving names, alleging that “it does not help” to put names on the table for the conversations that are being held at this time by the Minister of the Presidency, José Félix Bolaños, and the deputy of United We Can and leader of the PCE, Enrique Santiago, after coming to the fore the name of Victoria Rosell, the current Government delegate against gender violence, as a possible member designated by United We Can.

This morning the president of the United We Can parliamentary group in Congress, Jaume Asens, has acknowledged that they aspire for Rosell to be a member of the CGPJ, emphasizing that she is his “favorite candidate”.

In statements to Onda Cero, he emphasized that his profile is adequate to be part of the governing body of the judges, after the “ordeal” he has suffered with former judge Salvador Alba, who entered prison yesterday and organized a “lawfare” against Rosell .

A position that has also been expressed by the leader of Podemos in the Canary Islands, Laura Fuentes, who considers Rosell a “brilliant, feminist judge with unquestionable integrity.” In this way and through a comment on networks, she alluded to the fact that the Government delegate against gender violence “must be part” of the next CGPJ.

On the other hand, other sectors of the confederal space emphasize that they approach the negotiation to renew the CGPJ from the maxim that there are no vetoes, but they emphasize that the current moment requires prudence and discretion, without going into the issues of names of possible candidates.

And it is that from the minority partner they specify that the possibility of Rosell will always have their support but there may also be other profiles that could arouse their support.