In January 2012,
Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón, Minister of Justice for the new conservative
People's Party (PP) government led by
Mariano Rajoy, announced at his first appearance in parliament his intention to reform the Abortion Law of 2010. This act had been passed by the Socialist government of
Rodriguez Zapatero, establishing gestation-age-limited model favoured by most European countries, but was contested by the
Catholic Church in Spain and the PP, especially on the issue of whether minors between 16 and 18 may abort without parental consent. The new government proposed to return to the model of the 1982 Act, in which women had to argue the grounds for their decision to abort. On 20 December 2013, the
Government of Spain published its final
draft law on
abortion: Women undergoing abortion were to be considered "
victims", and the practice would only be lawful in the case of
rape or when there was a serious (but as yet undefined) health risk to the mother or the fetus. The likelihood of a child being born with disabilities would not be an acceptable justification for abortion. Under the new law, women under 18 would require parental consent and parental accompaniment during relevant consultations. Those seeking abortion in Spain would need approval from two independent doctors who would not be permitted to participate in the actual procedure. The Spanish Association of Accredited Abortion Clinics estimated that about 100,000 of the 118,000 abortions carried out in 2012 would be illegal under the new legislation. The revision was part of the 2011 PP election manifesto which was strongly influenced by the Roman
Catholic church and vigorously opposed by most opposition parties and women's groups, who saw it as an attack on women's rights. The massive protest against the reform of the abortion law was called
El tren de la libertad. In September 2014, Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy announced that the government would abandon the draft law due to lack of consensus, and that the government would seek to reform the 2010 law only by requiring 16 and 17-year-old women to obtain parental consent for an abortion. Minister of Justice
Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón announced his resignation. == 2022 extension of rights and elimination of obstacles ==