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VisitHow will the Spanish monarchy's approval change following King Juan Carlos I's lawsuit outcome?
Increase in approval • 25%
Decrease in approval • 25%
No change in approval • 25%
Monarchy abolished • 25%
Public opinion polls from reputable sources such as CIS (Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas)
Ex-Magistrates and Prosecutors Sue Emeritus King Juan Carlos I for Five Tax Offenses
Nov 25, 2024, 08:00 AM
A group of ex-Supreme Court magistrates, retired anti-corruption prosecutors, jurists, intellectuals, and journalists have filed a lawsuit against Emeritus King Juan Carlos I before the Supreme Court, alleging five offenses against the Public Treasury. Among the signatories are José Antonio Martín Pallín, Javier Pérez Royo, Josep Ramoneda, and Joaquín Urías. The lawsuit accuses the emeritus king of tax fraud related to his fiscal regularizations.
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Increased approval • 25%
Decreased approval • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Approval rating not measured • 25%
Increase by more than 5% • 25%
Decrease by more than 5% • 25%
No significant change (+/- 5%) • 25%
Data not available • 25%
Above 50% • 25%
40-50% • 25%
30-39% • 25%
Below 30% • 25%
Increase by over 5% • 33%
Increase by less than 5% • 33%
Decrease • 34%
Majority think sentence is too harsh • 25%
Majority think sentence is too lenient • 25%
Majority think sentence is fair • 25%
No clear majority opinion • 25%
No impact • 25%
Resigns as Prime Minister • 25%
Faces legal charges • 25%
Both resigns and faces legal charges • 25%
More positive • 25%
More negative • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Increased polarization • 25%
Majority support the decision • 25%
Majority oppose the decision • 25%
Mixed reactions • 25%
Minimal public interest • 25%
More supportive of King Charles • 25%
More supportive of Prince Andrew • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Divided opinion • 25%
Resigns from Position • 25%
Faces Disciplinary Action • 25%
No Consequences • 25%
Other Consequences • 25%
Granted asylum • 25%
Deported back to Venezuela • 25%
Moves to another country • 25%
Remains in Spain without asylum • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Case dismissed • 25%
Guilty of all charges • 25%
Guilty of some charges • 25%
Not guilty • 25%