The State Attorney's Office has asked the Supreme Court to reject the precautionary suspension of the extraordinary immigrant regularization decree approved in April. Legal services argue that requirements to halt the process are not met and it will not affect public services.
The State's legal services filed arguments on Monday before the Administrative Litigation Chamber. They note that people eligible to apply for authorizations already resided in Spain before January 1, 2026, and already use public services.
The Attorney's Office stresses that regularization will enable access to work and increase social contributions. It adds that a suspension would harm the public interest and nullify the application deadline, which ends on June 30.
The Supreme Court will hold hearings on Wednesday on suspension requests filed by Hazte Oír, Vox and the Community of Madrid. In April it already rejected an urgent precautionary measure due to lack of special urgency.