Today: September 27, 2024
February 23, 2022
1 min read

Lawyer Roberto Ruiz Díaz presents a memorial in the TE to revoke the mandate of Mayor José Luis Fábrega


Ruíz Díaz assured that he submitted the request personally to prevent it from being thought that it is a political party.

Lawyer Roberto Ruiz Díaz presents a memorial in the TE to revoke the mandate of Mayor José Luis Fábrega

Lawyer Roberto Ruiz Diaz. Photo: Yisell Arevalo

The lawyer Roberto Ruíz Díaz presented this Tuesday, in the Electoral Court (TE) the memorial so that the entity evaluates and gives the approval to begin collecting the signatures to revoke the mandate of the capital’s mayor, José Luis Fábrega.

Ruiz’s request arises “based on the constant questioning that is being given to his administration, the lack of transparency, the lack of citizen consultations, the administrative irregularities and the management of the budget that has been taking place.”

If the procedure is approved in the Electoral Court, Ruiz Díaz will have 120 days to collect around 160 thousand signatures, or the equivalent of 30% of the electoral roll that existed in 2019.

“We have appeared before the Electoral Tribunal by virtue of what is contemplated in Article 49 that the Electoral Tribunal itself issued to regulate what is the mandate regulation process,” said the jurist.

Ruíz Díaz assured that he submitted the request personally to prevent it from being thought that it is a political party.

“All the groups and all the sectors that feel that Mayor Fábrega’s mandate should be revoked, can unite openly without having a political nuance,” he said.



Source link

Latest Posts

They celebrated "Buenos Aires Coffee Day" with a tour of historic bars - Télam
Cum at clita latine. Tation nominavi quo id. An est possit adipiscing, error tation qualisque vel te.

Categories

Previous Story

The company Computer Plus SA was awarded for G. 133,560,000

The Court will review the ruling on "information and opinion" on radio and television
Next Story

The Court will review the ruling on "information and opinion" on radio and television

Latest from Blog

Go toTop