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During the 1930s, abortion laws were liberalized in the area controlled by the Republicans, but this was short-lived, as the Franco regime, with support of the Catholic Church, criminalized abortion again. The laws were relaxed in 1985, and were further liberalized in 2010. Abortion remains a controversial political issue in Spain, but regular ...
Union of the Centre of Catalonia (1978–1981) Party of the Communists of Catalonia (1982–2014) Communists of Catalonia; The Greens–Ecologist Confederation of Catalonia (1994–2001) In Struggle (1994–2016) Citizens for Change (1999–2011) Platform for Catalonia (2002–2019) New Catalan Left (2012–2014) Free (2016-2022) Braves (2019-2023)
The Republican Left of Catalonia (Catalan: Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya, ERC; IPA: [əsˈkɛrə rəpubːliˈkanə ðə kətəˈluɲə]; generically branded as Esquerra Republicana) [2] is a pro-Catalan independence, social democratic political party in the Spanish autonomous community of Catalonia, with a presence also in Valencia, the Balearic Islands and the French department of ...
The party platform previously called for a constitutional amendment to protect unborn children. Now, it says abortion should be left to the states. Why the New Republican Platform Is Moderate on ...
The new platform falls short of that, instead only saying that states are now free to pass laws in accordance with the Constitution and with the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in 2022 overturning a ...
Democrats believe that abortion is the most vulnerable issue for Republicans in 2024, and removing the idea of a national abortion ban from the platform seems to indicate that we’ve learned the ...
The national Republican Party is set to abandon a decades-long push for a federal abortion ban and soften the stance on same-sex marriage in its platform.
The law does not recognize a "right of self-determination" in spite of a politically relevant pro independence movement in Catalonia. According to the governmental Sociology Studies Center (CIS) CIS official poll in 2001 there were 33.9% of Catalans in favor of an independent Catalonia, 48.1% against, 13.3 undecided and 2.8% did not answer.