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Spain is introducing quotas for women in politics and business

2023-03-04T18:41:42.546Z


Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has announced that a new law will ensure more women in management positions. Meanwhile, the government is being criticized for controversial changes in sex crimes law.


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Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez

Photo: BORJA SANCHEZ-TRILLO / EPA

Spain's left-wing head of government, Pedro Sánchez, has announced a law on equality for women when filling influential posts in politics and administration, as well as in associations and larger companies.

"If women make up half of society, then they are entitled to half of the political and economic power," Sánchez said on Saturday during a meeting of his party in Madrid.

The draft law should be passed in the cabinet next Tuesday.

Some of the plans provide for transitional periods of several years and changes in the law.

At the start of the election year in Spain

In the future, the government and parliament should be made up of equal numbers of women and men.

Women already make up 60 percent of the current government, but far less than 50 percent in the two chambers of parliament in Madrid.

For many other areas of important posts in society, it is envisaged that each of the two sexes will hold at least 40 percent of the posts.

The announcement comes shortly at the start of an election year in Spain.

Local and regional elections are coming up this year, as well as parliamentary elections at the end of the year.

The coalition government of Sánchez's socialist party PSOE and the left-wing party Unidas Podemos are currently in trouble at the beginning of the election year over a dispute over sex crimes.

The "Only yes means yes" law passed last year, which was supposed to make it easier to convict sex offenders and better protect women, has led to more than 721 sentence reductions and 74 early releases of sex offenders in the past few months, contrary to the intentions of the legislature .

PSOE and Unidas Podemos have not yet been able to agree on how the law should be corrected.

It was therefore not ruled out that the PSOE could push the law through parliament with the votes of the conservative opposition against its own coalition partner.

This could happen on March 9th, one day after International Women's Day.

ktz/dpa

Source: spiegel

All news articles on 2023-03-04

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