1169 provisions published
The Supreme Court has declared null the requirement to provide tax identification when requesting early retirement. This requirement was a bureaucratic step that complicated the process without clear legal justification.
Workers who want to retire before the ordinary age will no longer have to provide tax data in the initial application. This saves time and reduces necessary documents, speeding up the process by several days or weeks depending on social security timelines.
The Supreme Court has partially annulled the Royal Decree that regulated a public employment offer to stabilize temporary workers in the General State Administration. The remainder of the call remains valid.
Thousands of people who applied to that call will see how some selection processes may be revalidated or annulled based on what the Court considered illegal. This can change who passes or fails the tests, or force exams to be repeated.
The Government expands the democratic memory law to include more beneficiaries in compensation and official recognition. Now people who suffered political repression can access aid that the law did not previously cover.
Citizens with family members who died or suffered serious injuries for fighting for democracy will be able to request economic compensation and official State recognition. Specific amounts and deadlines will be detailed in the regulatory development.
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