Spain When the motion of no confidence is voted on, what votes do they need and when does it end?

The Congress of Deputies votes this Wednesday on the motion of censure against the Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez

Spain When the motion of no confidence is voted on, what votes do they need and when does it end?

The Congress of Deputies votes this Wednesday on the motion of censure against the Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez.

This regulatory action at the proposal of Vox, which has the candidate, Ramón Tamames, is a constitutional tool regulated in articles 113 and 114 of the Magna Carta.

For it to prosper, Congress must withdraw its trust from the Executive with an absolute majority. However, in the vote this Wednesday a priori it will only have the 52 votes of the parliamentary group of Santiago Abascal's party.

The Popular Party announced that it will abstain and the rest of the Chamber will vote against it in the sixth motion of censure of democracy.

The regulation of the Congress of Deputies determines in four articles the operation and regulation of a motion of censure in the statements of articles 175 to 179.

Specifically, article 177 defines the following operation prior to voting:

Of the five motions of no confidence voted to date, all have failed except the one headed by the now Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, and that of Tamames also points to defeat.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project