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Spain’s busy goading the US again, this time by petitioning the European Commission
to activate its Blocking Statute, which protects European businesses and individuals
from foreign sanctions - Brussels’ legal challenge to Madrid will be welcomed by anyone who was appalled by
Pedro Sánchez’s proposal to impose a 100 per cent tax on non- The Commission argues that, by acting as a deterrent to EU citizens considering a property purchase in Spain, such rules might infringe European laws ensuring the free movement of capital and nondiscrimination. Spain has two months to justify or amend the legislation, or the case might be taken to the European Court of Justice. If this regulation is of questionable legality, Sánchez’s 100 per cent tax proposal
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would only apply to non- As it prepares its response to Brussels, the Spanish government is waiting on one from the same source. Madrid’s demand that the EU activate the Blockage Statute is one of several that have been made since early last year, when Trump began imposing sanctions on ICC members investigating Israeli and American citizens for war crimes (neither the US or Israel are members of the ICC). The EU Parliament has twice passed resolutions requesting that the Commission protect ICC judges and prosecutors against what it sees as Trump’s attempt to secure legal immunity; but the Commission has refused to budge, without explaining why. Both Brussels’ and Madrid’s demands are, at root, attempts to stop discriminatory
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