The Constitution Commission and Regulations of the Congress will debate this Friday the approach prepared by the technical secretariat in which it is recommended to shelve the project of constitutional reform of the Government of Pedro Castillo to promote a constituent Assembly.
The document that will evaluate the working group chaired by Patricia Juárez (Popular Force) proposes the archiving of the plan of the initiative presented by the Executive.
Among the main questions, the text points out that this project proposes a break in the intangibility clause, something prohibited by the same 1993 Constitution that the Government proposes to modify in order to make a Constituent Assembly viable.
It is also rejected for evaluating that the Constitution at no time wanted to regulate this procedure as a possibility for changes to be made in the Magna Carta, as well as for including contradictions between its final objective and its proposals.
For all these reasons, the text of the technical secretariat signed by Patricia Juárez considers that a modification that allows a Constituent Assembly cannot be carried out.
In this sense, the possibility of filing the initiative without an opinion in between will be put up for debate and vote, as it evaluates the proposal as incompatible with the Constitution.
If this document is approved, the commission would file the initiative that President Pedro Castillo announced and that was approved by the Council of Ministers at the end of April.