After the death of
Francisco Franco in 1975, the
Spanish transition to democracy saw the birth of the
Pact of Forgetting, where both leftist and rightist parties of Spain decided to avoid confronting directly the legacy of Francoism. Because of the Pact (expressed most clearly in the
1977 Amnesty Law), there were no prosecutions for persons responsible for human rights violations or similar crimes committed during the Francoist period, no exhumations of mass graves, Francoist public memorials remained standing, and the Francoist "Day of Victory" celebration was changed to "Armed Forces Day", celebrating both
Nationalist and
Republican parties of the
Spanish Civil War. In 2007, the government of
Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero passed the
Historical Memory Law, formally condemning the repressions of the Franco regime and giving certain rights to the victims and the descendants of victims of the Civil War and the subsequent dictatorship. However, the law attracted criticism, with some on the left arguing that it does not go far enough and with the conservative
People's Party arguing that it was "using the Civil War as an argument for political propaganda." On 18 June 2018, the
government of
Pedro Sánchez announced its intention to remove Franco's remains from the
Valle de los Caídos, the monument to the Civil War on the outskirts of Madrid. On 24 August 2018, Sánchez's cabinet approved a decree that modifies two aspects of the 2007 Historical Memory Law to allow the exhumation of Franco's remains from the Valle de los Caídos. After a year of legal battles with Franco's descendants, the exhumation took place on 24 October 2019, and Franco was reburied at
Mingorrubio Cemetery in
El Pardo with his wife
Carmen Polo. == Summary ==