Spanish PM says monarchy vote flouts constitution

Spanish Prime minister Mariano Rajoy announces the abdication of Spain's King Juan Carlos on June 2, 2014 in Madrid. Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, that a referendum on the future of the monarchy, demanded
Spanish Prime minister Mariano Rajoy announces the abdication of Spain's King Juan Carlos on June 2, 2014 in Madrid. Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned on Tuesday, June 3, 2014, that a referendum on the future of the monarchy, demanded by anti-royalists after King Juan Carlos announced his abdication, would require a change to the constitution. -- PHOTO: AFP

MADRID (AFP) - Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned on Tuesday that a referendum on the future of the monarchy, demanded by anti-royalists after King Juan Carlos announced his abdication, would require a change to the constitution.

Hours after 76-year-old Juan Carlos said on Monday he was handing over the crown to his more popular son Crown Prince Felipe, thousands of protesters filled Madrid's central Puerta del Sol square calling for a vote on the monarchy itself.

Republican sentiment remains widespread in Spain, which only restored the monarchy in 1975 after the death of General Francisco Franco, who had ruled for four decades.

"I think the monarchy has the support of the great majority in Spain," Rajoy said when asked about calls for a referendum on the monarchy during a conference in Madrid.

"Propose a constitutional reform if you don't like this constitution. You have the perfect right to do so. But what you cannot do in a democracy is bypass the law," Rajoy said.

Spain's 1978 constitution which established the monarchy was supported by a great majority of Spaniards in a referendum at the time, the prime minister said.

Juan Carlos was widely respected for smoothing Spain's transition to democracy after the death of General Francisco Franco in 1975, most famously facing down an attempted military coup in February 1981.

But many Spaniards were outraged when they discovered the king took a luxury elephant-hunting trip to Botswana in 2012 as they struggled to find jobs in a recession.

Resentment over the monarchy grew when the king's younger daughter Cristina was named a suspect in relation to her husband Inaki Urdangarin's allegedly corrupt business practices.

Rajoy's government met Tuesday to draw up a draft law on the succession, which must then go to parliament for approval, clearing the way for the future King Felipe VI.

Spain's main political parties, the ruling conservative Popular Party and the opposition Socialist Party, support the monarchy.

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