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Oct 30, 2025

Basque Parliament stalls on Vitoria refugee centre after Political Popular Party pulls motion

Basque Parliament stalls on Vitoria refugee centre after Political Popular Party pulls motion
Efforts to secure cross-party backing for a new 350-bed reception centre for asylum-seekers in Vitoria-Gasteiz collapsed on 30 October when the conservative Partido Popular (PP) abruptly withdrew its own motion, thereby voiding an amendment that had been agreed by EH Bildu, the Socialists (PSE) and Sumar.

The PP originally sought to block the Government of Spain’s project, arguing the facility was too large for effective integration, but party spokesperson Laura Garrido admitted the withdrawal was a tactical move to prevent the rival amendment—which called for “institutional consensus” rather than cancellation—from gaining the chamber’s approval. Vox tabled a separate motion against the centre but lacks the votes for passage.

With the legislative path now in limbo, the Ministry of Inclusion & Migration must decide whether to push ahead using existing executive powers or alter the design to assuage local opposition. The stalemate comes just months before Spain begins redistributing asylum-seekers from saturated reception hubs in the Canary Islands under a revised Article 35 of the Aliens Act.

For mobility and relocation providers the episode highlights the political volatility around Spain’s reception-capacity expansion. Delays could prolong stays in temporary hotels and raise accommodation costs in Madrid and Andalusia, where intake numbers have already exceeded forecast. Employers relocating humanitarian-visa holders or staff under Spain’s protection rules should anticipate processing slow-downs in the Basque Country and monitor for further regional pushback.
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