The president Spanish Confederation of Business Organizations (CEOE) convened an extraordinary executive committee for the following Monday to consider the “situation in Spain” following the agreement reached by Younts and the PSOE. In a very brief statement, the organization points to “serious concerns that exist in the business world.”

Businessmen are not the only group that has expressed outrage at the pact signed this Thursday in Brussels. So did four associations of judges and prosecutors, who warned of a “clear risk of erosion of democracy.”

Garamendi had previously criticized the agreement between PSOE and Sumar, which included measures that directly affect companies, such as corporate taxation or the desire to reduce the working day from 40 hours to 37.5.

“This is an attack on the constitutional role of social agents,” CEOE, Cepyme and ATA said after learning of the agreement between the group led by Yolanda Díaz and the Socialist Party.

In an agreement signed in Brussels between the Independence Party and the PSOE, both groups commit to “facilitate and promote the return to Catalonia of the headquarters of companies that have moved to other territories in recent years.”

In addition, the possibility of changing the LOFCA to facilitate the transfer of 100% of all taxes paid in Catalonia is being considered. This point has also been criticized by the Association of Comptrollers of the Treasury, which considers it “urgent” to move towards “restoring rationality, common sense, the principles that inspire our constitutional regime, and seeking a stable political consensus that will achieve unity, away from confrontation and ultimately ultimately representing the vast majority of the Spanish nation.