And they will be the three that this Wednesday will forward a petition to the Ombudsman to present an appeal of unconstitutionality. Read more: The Government will prohibit institutions from having servers outside the EU, but does not explain why it has done so with "urgency" in the midst of the independence crisis The problem is that the appeal for unconstitutionality, according to article 162 of the Constitution, can only be presented by the President of the Government, the Ombudsman, 50 deputies or 50 senators, governments or regional parliaments. The sum of the Unidas Podemos, ERC and Más País groups is 51 seats. But in the current framework—investiture negotiations—citizens are "at the mercy of the parties," as Luján points out. No organization is interested in opening this melon with sufficient intensity, and even less so when the possibility of forming a Government seems so close for the first time.
In fact, the PDLI itself has sent letters to the different parties, and none of them have commented. But the secrecy surrounding the investiture continues. The royal decree has been marked by propaganda When the content of this royal decree law was known for the first time, it was in an interview by Pedro Sánchez on a radio morning show. In this interview, the acting Asia Phone Number List President of the Government announced that there would be no independence "neither offline nor online." There was initial alarmism. "The Government used this royal decree in a propaganda way during the campaign. And the other experts in propaganda and fake news , who govern in Catalonia, said that it was a digital 155, a digital coup d'état," warns Sánchez Almeida.

But after the alarmism, the concern continued. In the words of Professor Enric Luján: "This is not an attack on Internet rights, it is an attack on tangible and fundamental rights." "The Government could censor your internet access solely because your phone is at coordinates that could be considered suspicious. It will arbitrarily deprive you of fundamental rights." The problem, he details, is that the royal decree "is associated with something about the Catalans or something about the Internet." "A case of shock doctrine," warns Luján about the popular term coined by journalist Naomi Klein. But when the mobilizations in Catalonia cease, the royal decree law will continue in force.