The legislator questioned that Congress did not establish a date for the advancement of elections after the Constitution Commission sent the proposal of the Government of Dina Boluarte to the archive.
Congresswoman Flor Pablo Medina spoke after the Constitution Commission send to the archive the project of the Executive Power that promoted the early elections by 2023. The member of the Integrity and Development caucus —through her Twitter account— stressed that the majority of Parliament does not want to leave and the solution to the crisis is now in the hands of Dina Boluarte with his resignation.
“Congressmen from the benches of APP, Perú Libre, Acción Popular, Avanza País, Renovación Popular and Podemos Perú, filed the project to advance the 2023 elections in the Constitution Commission,” said Flor Pablo.
“The majority of Congress does not want to leave, the solution to the crisis is now in the hands of President Dina Boluarte. Her resignation is the only thing that could force an early election,” he added.
Congresswoman Flor Pablo spoke through her Twitter account.
Flor Pablo also specified that “personal and partisan interests weighed more than those of Peru”, in relation to the protests that are taking place in the country, the same ones that have unleashed more than 50 deaths.
“Personal and partisan interests weighed more than those of Peru and we could not provide a way out of the political and social crisis we are experiencing. (…) After weeks of debates in Congress, we reached the only certain point: the majority did not He wants to leave. No opinion prospered,” he said.
Archive project of the Executive
The Constitution Commission of the Congress archived the project of advancement of general elections promoted by the government of Dina Boluarte. The benches of Avanza País, Renovación Popular, Alianza para el Progreso (APP), Acción Popular, Podemos Perú and Perú Libre opposed the initiative in the context of the political crisis.
Parliamentarian Alejandro Cavero presented a point of order that demanded that the second paragraph of article 78 of the Regulations of Congress be respected; that is, for the initiative to be debated, it must have the approval of the majority of the commission, otherwise, the holder would send it to the archive and it cannot be seen unless agreed by half plus one of the legal number of congressmen.