00:00I don't think it's a clash between politics and the Magistrate's Office.
00:04We have a Constitution.
00:06The Constitution was made specifically to protect the dignity of all people.
00:14If something doesn't work in the Magistrate's Office,
00:17you have to correct what doesn't work.
00:20I don't know, there are the times of the trials, for example,
00:24which are so dilated, to say the least.
00:27You have to correct what doesn't work.
00:30But, being anchored to our Constitution,
00:34it was made so that each one of us
00:37is enshrined in its fundamental rights.
00:40So, you are referring to the separation of careers,
00:43which requires a second passage.
00:45The separation of careers, and not just that.
00:48The separation of careers means creating two higher councils in the Magistrate's Office.
00:53It means obstructing the possibility
00:57that the organization of the offices is done together.
01:01It means transforming, even more than it is now,
01:08the Public Prosecutor's Office into a kind of organ
01:13that tends to obtain the conviction
01:16rather than verify if people have or have not committed the crime.
01:21These are all things that go against the citizen.
01:24The High Court, which deals with the discipline of the magistrates,
01:30is made in such a way that you can't go into the core of the matter,
01:40which is to verify if the rules have been respected by the magistrate.
01:45The extradition from the world of the Magistrate's Office
01:49also involves a loss in those cases.
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