Andorra Opposition Leader Confident on Pension Reform Consensus, Demands Pre-Signing EU Referendum
Cerni Escalé of Concordia pledges broad agreement on pension system overhaul while urging immediate referendum on EU association treaty before any.
Key Points
- Escalé confident in broad consensus on Andorra's pension system reforms despite party differences.
- Pledges foundational agreement uniting all forces on core social security elements.
- Demands immediate referendum on EU association agreement before official signing.
- Warns post-signature vote would be undemocratic, urging action 'this afternoon'.
Cerni Escalé, leader of the Concordia parliamentary group and head of Andorra's main opposition party, expressed strong confidence in reaching a broad political consensus on reforming the Principat's pension system.
In an interview on the RTVA programme *La clau*, Escalé acknowledged differences in party approaches but stressed that common ground exists on the core elements of social security. He pledged to champion a foundational agreement uniting all political forces where positions align, insisting he has no doubts about its feasibility.
Escalé also used the platform to press the government for clarity on plans for a referendum over Andorra's association agreement with the European Union. Speaking from Andorra la Vella, he demanded the vote be scheduled without delay—and crucially, before any official signing of the treaty.
The opposition figure argued that postponing the decision makes no sense, given the executive's prior commitments. He dismissed as undemocratic any referendum held after signature, warning it would undermine the democratic process.
"If the government truly wants public input on the text, it should call the vote this very afternoon," Escalé said forcefully, according to RTVA reports. Concordia maintains the consultation must precede signing to hold genuine weight.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: