The immigrant regularization process will continue. The Supreme Court has refused to provisionally suspend the decree approved in April by the Government and has agreed that the process continues while it resolves the appeals filed against the rule, to which more than half a million immigrants have already requested to benefit. The decision was made by the Contentious-Administrative Chamber after the five hearings that were held this Friday to debate the precautionary request for suspension of the regularization process requested by the Community of Madrid, Vox and three associations (Hazteoír, Libertad y Justicia, and the Association for Reconciliation and Historical Truth). After three hours of deliberation, the magistrates have denied the legitimacy of these associations to appeal, so their challenges will not be studied. The court has accepted the power of the Government of Isabel Díaz Ayuso and the party of Santiago Abascal to sue against the regularization, but has rejected all the arguments they have put forward to suspend it as a precautionary measure, such as the supposed “impact” on health services or the alteration of the electoral roll. From the Government, the Minister of Inclusion, Social Security and Migration, Elma Saiz, has indicated in an interview on Cadena SER that the decision of the high court is “justice in the face of the irresponsibility of some.”
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