In December 2018, the five year term of the General Council of the Judiciary expired. The socialist Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez and the opposition
People's Party led by
Pablo Casado began negotiations on a new Council. A few months earlier, as the procedure dictates, the
President of the Supreme Court Carlos Lesmes sent a list of 51 candidates to the Parliament in order to choose the twelve members as defined in the Constitution and the Organic Law of the Judiciary. , candidate for the Presidency of the
Supreme Court of Spain and the
General Council of the Judiciary until the leak of voice messages. In November 2018 the Socialist Party and the People's Party agreed to renew the Council, which according to reports would include the conservative
Manuel Marchena as president. However, a week later a series of voice messages from the People's Party spokesman in the Senate,
Ignacio Cosidó, was revealed, in which he described the agreement reached as "hopeful" and stated that it would allow them to control the from behind and presiding over room 61 — the special room to prosecute presidents or magistrates of the Supreme Chamber or the illegality procedures of political parties. After these leaks, magistrate Manuel Marchena himself refused to be the candidate to preside over said judicial bodies. His candidacy was also rejected by the various judicial associations. After the date of 4 December 2018, the term of the
General Council of the Judiciary expired. During the electoral year of 2019 —,
President of the Supreme Court Carlos Lesmes urged three times through letters to the presidents of the legislative chambers to renew the Council. In the two general elections of that year,
April and
November, the
Socialist Party of
Pedro Sánchez won. At the beginning of 2020, Sánchez was re-elected prime minister by a simple majority of the Congress of Deputies, after reaching a
coalition agreement with
Unidas Podemos and enlist the support of other minority parties to form a
new government. During 2020, with
Pablo Casado still as leader the Popular Party, it remained impossible to renew the CGPJ. Amongst the PPs demands was that the minority partner of the government coalition,
Unidas Podemos, not participate in the negotiations. Another demand, that the system of election of the members of the Council be reformed (also demanded by other parties) proved more difficult. Although the first of the conditions was implicitly accepted, since Podemos did not actively participate in any of the negotiations, the Government categorically refused to reform the election system without first renewing the body. After announcing a bill to lower the majority necessary for the renewal of the CGPJ, 32 members of the
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and the
People's Party sat down again to negotiate. During 2021, the PSOE withdrew the reform and both parties managed to reach some agreements to renew other bodies such as the
Constitutional Court, the
Court of Auditors, the
Spanish Ombudsman and the
Spanish Data Protection Agency, but not to renew the CGPJ, since both parties differed in relation to reforming the method of election of the council, and neither side were willing to compromise. The
Government, finally, promoted a reform of the Organic Law of the Judiciary (LOPJ) that established a special regime for the
CGPJ in case of being in office, limiting their ability to make appointments while they were in that situation. and
Alberto Núñez Feijóo in one of their meetings to negotiate the renewal of the CGPJ. The year 2022 marked a new leadership for the
People's Party, which elected
Alberto Núñez Feijóo as their new leader. The negotiating positions remained similar to previous years, but both Sánchez and Núñez Feijóo set out to unravel the situation. This was hampered by
news leaks from previous meetings in the middle of the year again paralyzing the negotiations. In October 2022, the president of the Supreme Court and of the General Council of the Judiciary,
Carlos Lesmes, submitted his resignation to
King Felipe VI and requested his reinstatement as magistrate of the Supreme Court. At the end of 2022 the Government announced it would present a bill to reform the
crime of sedition, and the crime of
embezzlement. The opposition People's Party demanded that such plans be dropped as a condition to continue negotiating the restoration of the CGPJ. The Government also presented amendments to the bill to reform the Organic Law of the Judiciary (LOPJ) to allow the Council to appoint justices of the Constitutional Court by simple majority, thereby enabling reappointment of the one third of justices whose term had expired. The problem had been that with a two-thirds majority the conservative members of the Council had used their votes to block the appointments. Congress approved the reforms in December 2022. Faced with these reforms, the People's Party opposition filed an
appeal for protection of their citizen rights before the Constitutional Court requesting the suspension of the plenary session on Friday 16. The appeal claimed that the modifications to the laws did not comply "with the constitutional doctrine on the exercise of the right of amendment and the homogeneous relationship that must exist between the amendments and the legislative initiative that is intended to be modified". The Court upheld he appeal by six votes to five and ordered that the bill to amend the laws should be suspended as a precautionary measure. The Prime Minister described the decision as “unprecedented”. Both the
President of the Congress of Deputies Meritxell Batet and the
President of the Senate Ander Gil, confirmed that they would respect the decision of the Court, although they considered the decision a dangerous precedent since it meant that "the interruption of the legislative power is within the reach of a single deputy by filing an appeal" or prevent the "legitimate representatives of popular sovereignty" from "exercising their functions and debating or voting within the terms established in the legal system”. Likewise, they defended "parliamentary autonomy and the functions of the legislature" and confirmed that they would present allegations in the procedure. In his traditional
Christmas Eve National Speech King
Felipe VI warned of the "erosion" of the institutions and called for them to be "strengthened" and "be an example of integrity and rectitude". Likewise, he urged "exercise responsibility and reflect constructively on the consequences that ignoring these risks may have for our union, our coexistence, and our institutions". the Plenary of the General Council of the Judiciary proposed to the king the appointment of the magistrates of the Supreme Court, César Tolosa Tribiño and María Luisa Segoviano Astaburuaga, as new magistrates of the Constitutional Court. After these nominations and the two candidates proposed by the
Government — the magistrate
Juan Carlos Campo and the professor Laura Díez Bueso —, the renewal of said court would be completed. The new magistrates took office before the king on 31 December 2022. On 22 March 2023, the member of the CGPJ Concepción Sáez resigned, denouncing the "unsustainable" situation of the body, the "inability to make decisions" and the little prospect of renewal. In January 2024, the European Commission confirmed that it has agreed to mediate negotiations between the government and the opposition. After the two main political parties reached agreement, on 25 July 2024 the new members of the Council assumed office, ending the crisis. == Reactions ==