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Fact check: Will Spain’s regularised migrants be allowed to vote?

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Fact check: Will Spain’s regularised migrants be allowed to vote?

The Spanish government’s controversial decision to approve a decree that will regularise 500,000 undocumented migrants and asylum seekers has sparked debate across Europe.

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Alongside more measured criticism and analysis, a wave of misleading claims has surfaced.

Some widely shared posts on X, amassing millions of views and thousands of shares, claim that these newly regularised migrants will be given the automatic right to vote.

Others say that they will be put on a fast track to citizenship, allowing them to vote and, in turn, creating a “loyal voting bloc” for Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and his left-wing government.

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When you look at Spain’s immigration, naturalisation and voting rules, there is little truth to these claims.

What does the decree entail and is it new?

The decree, expected to come into force in April, applies to at least 500,000 undocumented migrants and asylum seekers currently living in Spain.

Applicants for regularisation have to prove they have no criminal record and have lived in Spain for at least five months or sought asylum by the end of December 2025.

It’s not the first time Spain has regularised multiple migrants: the Spanish Commission for Refugee Aid (CEAR) said this is the seventh similar process since 1986.

The decree provides beneficiaries with a one-year residence permit and the right to work in Spain.

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Sánchez’s government has said that the move will strengthen Spain’s labour market. Spain’s minister of inclusion, social security and migration, Elma Saiz, called it a “migratory model based on human rights, integration, co-existence and which is compatible with economic growth and social cohesion”.

The measure has equally sparked ire from the conservative People’s Party (PP) and the far-right Vox. The leader of the PP accused Sánchez of attempting to deflect attention away from the government’s response to multiple deadly train crashes over the past month.

Who can vote in Spain?

Spain’s voting rules are clearly defined.

According to the Spanish interior ministry, only Spanish citizens of legal age (currently 18 years old) are entitled to vote in national elections and elections in Spain’s autonomous communities. In European elections, EU citizens resident in Spain may also vote.

In local municipal elections, voting rights are more limited. Non-EU nationals may only vote if Spain has a reciprocal voting agreement with their country of citizenship. This applies currently to nationals of 13 countries, including Iceland, Norway and the UK, provided they also meet residency requirements (which can differ depending on the country).

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Contrary to online claims, simply holding legal residence in Spain does not grant the right to vote in national elections.

Does regularisation lead to quick citizenship?

Another claim circulating on the viral posts suggests that regularised migrants can gain Spanish citizenship in as little as two years. But this is misleading.

Under Spanish law, only citizens of specific countries, namely Portugal, the Philippines, Andorra, Equatorial Guinea and most Latin American countries, as well as those of Sephardic origin, can apply for Spanish citizenship after two years of legal and continuous residence.

For the vast majority of people from other countries, though, it takes much longer: most immigrants to Spain need to live there legally for 10 years to be able to apply for citizenship, but this is shortened to five years for refugees and can be shortened even further to one year if the individual was born in Spain or has been married to a Spanish citizen.

Regardless of the timeframe, the residency period is just the start of the process. The decree itself grants one year of legal residency, meaning it would not be sufficient for the majority of people to gain citizenship in that time frame.

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Applicants must still pass Spanish language and other tests, as well as wait for processing, which can take several years.

In conclusion, Spain’s new regularisation push grants migrants legal residence, not citizenship, and it does not confer voting rights in elections.

These rights are legally distinct in Spain and remain unchanged with this new decree.

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Khamenei body in cold storage as feared Basij mobilizes ahead of historic Iran funeral

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Khamenei body in cold storage as feared Basij mobilizes ahead of historic Iran funeral

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Tehran is preparing for the July 9 burial of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, more than four months after his death, as authorities mobilize the Basij militia and mount a massive security operation ahead of what is expected to be a “historic” turnout.

The lengthy delay to the funeral has raised questions about how Khamenei’s remains have been preserved, as Islamic tradition, anaylsts say, generally calls for prompt burial and discourages chemical embalming.

“The mechanism is almost certainly refrigerated cold storage, not embalming, as Islam bars chemical embalming,” counterterrorism expert Dr. Mohammed Omar told Fox News Digital.

MOJTABA KHAMENEI USING ‘BIN LADEN TEMPLATE’ TO SURVIVE, LEARNED FROM ABBOTTABAD: ANALYST

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Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei speaks in Tehran, Iran, on Jan 3. (Iranian Leader Press Office/Anadolu via Getty Images)

“Shia law allows delayed burial and preservation by cold in exceptional cases, and a clerical exemption for a Supreme Leader is easy to get,” he added.

“Iran’s forensic morgues already hold bodies for months, so four months in freezing is not exotic. That is what ‘religious and legal standards’ cover,” Mohammed said.

Operation Epic Fury began on Feb. 28 with a targeted U.S. strike that killed Khamenei at his compound in Tehran. He had ruled the Islamic Republic for 36 years.

“There may not be much of a body to present. Khamenei was killed by a bunker-penetration strike, and others killed with him were recovered weeks later and identified by DNA,” Mohammed explained.

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“A regime holding an intact body does not cancel the farewell, shift the burial site repeatedly, and confirm that he can be buried only days out.

“It reads less like reverence and more like remains they could preserve but not display,” he said.

WAVE OF ATTACKS ON IRAN’S IRGC RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT RENEWED KURDISH INSURGENCY

In this picture obtained from Iran’s ISNA news agency, Mojtaba Khamenei (C), son of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, walks along a street in Tehran on May 31, 2019. (Hamid FOROUTAN / ISNA / AFP via Getty Images)

With that, Iranian authorities are portraying the funeral as both a farewell to the leader and a show of strength under the slogan “We Must Avenge.”

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According to Iranian state media, Yaqoub Soleimani, deputy for cultural and educational affairs at the Martyrs Foundation and one of the funeral’s organizers, said Wednesday the ceremony would be conducted “with full grandeur.”

Soleimani said a turnout of 1 million people would make the event “a historical occasion” and “a national epic in the memory of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

The schedule starts with public viewings Saturday and Sunday in Tehran. A funeral procession is scheduled for July 6, where local authorities estimate 15 million to 20 million people could attend.

Another procession is planned the following day in Qom, one of Shiite Islam’s holiest cities.

“The numbers the regime is putting out — up to 20 million mourners in Tehran, 35 million nationwide, more than 90 countries represented, 14,000 journalists credentialed — are not logistics,” Mohammed, of the George Washington Program on Extremism, said.

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“They are the message. Tehran is spending everything it has to project continuity and strength because after the war both are in question.”

IRAN’S UNPRECEDENTED ‘WHOLE-REGIME’ DELEGATION AT US DEAL TALKS SIGNALS ONE GOAL: EXPERT

Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) military personnel are walking along Enghelab (Revolution) Avenue as an Iranian Kheibar Surface-to-Surface missile is being unveiled during the Ela Beit Al-Moghaddas (Al-Aqsa Mosque) military rally in Tehran, Iran, on November 24, 2023. The IRGC is unveiling two new missiles during the rally. (Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

According to Iran International, Tehran is also preparing a massive security operation for the funeral.

“The Basij and the IRGC running this is the story, not a detail,” Mohammed said.

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“The Basij is coordinating logistics — highways turned into parking, each Tehran district assigned a province, five public holidays declared — and the Guard has crowd control.

“This is a mobilization dressed as a funeral. The same apparatus organizing the grief this week is the apparatus that put down the January protests and denied funerals to the families of the people it killed then. American readers should hold those two facts next to each other,” he added.

While senior Iraqi officials will attend the funeral, representation from other major powers will be limited.

Although Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian personally invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India will instead send a lower-level official delegation.

Reports on June 30 also confirmed that Georgian President Mikheil Kavelashvili will attend the ceremony.

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“No major power is sending its top leader,” Mohammed said.

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“For a regime that claims to lead a front stretching from Beirut to Sanaa, a regional turnout at its founder-successor’s funeral is the isolation showing through the pageantry.

“For Washington, it is a useful readout: the war left Tehran’s axis smaller and more regional than the regime advertises,” he added.

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‘Positive progress’ as US, Iran wrap up indirect technical talks in Doha

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‘Positive progress’ as US, Iran wrap up indirect technical talks in Doha
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Russia Approved Secret China Military Training At Top Level: Reuters

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Russia Approved Secret China Military Training At Top Level: Reuters

July 1 (Reuters) – China’s covert military training of Russian forces last year was personally approved by President Vladimir Putin’s defense minister and directly involved at least four Russian and Chinese generals, according to two European officials and documents seen by Reuters.

The officials said the involvement of such high-ranking individuals in training linked to the Ukraine war signaled the importance for Russia and China of such cooperation, which has caused alarm in Europe even as Beijing has denied it took place.

A classified Russian document seen by Reuters directly referred to an internal decree issued by Defense Minister Andrei Belousov in August, 2025.

It said that, in accordance with a decision by Belousov, a delegation from Russia’s armed forces travelled to China to participate in training exercises at People’s Liberation Army (PLA) facilities.

Training in Radiological, Biological, Chemical Warfare

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The same report detailed one of the training courses – a three-week session focused on radiological, chemical and biological protection at a military facility in Beijing in November.

The report and a second one described and displayed images of Russian soldiers being lectured by a Chinese instructor, looking at a model nuclear reactor, and being taught about “chemical reconnaissance”, “radiation reconnaissance” and protecting ventilation systems from contamination.

The inclusion of radiological, biological and chemical warfare training underlined the strategic nature of the exchanges, one of the European officials said, noting that the topic was particularly sensitive for militaries in general.

The defense ministries of Russia and China did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

China’s foreign ministry said in a statement that its stance on the Ukraine crisis had remained consistent.

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“The relevant allegations are entirely unfounded,” it added, referring to details contained in this report.

Beijing says it is neutral in Russia’s war with Ukraine, and presents itself as a peace mediator.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands during a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, on May 20, 2026.

Maxim Shemetov/Pool Photo via AP

According to a Reuters report last month citing European intelligence agencies and military documents, China in November trained around 200 Russian military personnel, some of whom have since joined the war in Ukraine.

The Kremlin declined to comment on that report, but complained about “false information” published in the West.

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European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on June 15 that Brussels had confirmed through its own channels that the training had taken place and was now assessing the implications.

Beijing described her comments as “nothing but smears”.

EU Ponders Response To Trade Partner China

European powers, which have viewed Russia as their main security threat since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, have watched warily as ties have grown closer between Moscow and China, the world’s second largest economy and a key EU trade partner.

For the 27-member bloc, discussion behind closed doors centers around whether further measures are needed in response to the training, given the trade priorities that traditionally shape the relationship with Beijing.

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The EU has already imposed sanctions on Chinese companies that it says support Russia’s war effort.

A third official, in Brussels, told Reuters the bloc had to stop viewing China primarily through an economic lens, but focus on what Kallas called its role as a “decisive enabler of Russia’s war”.

Both of the European officials, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the information, identified the signatories of a July 2 agreement underpinning the training as Russian Major General Rustam Khusainov and Chinese Senior Colonel Sun Dayun.

Andrei Kartapolov, a senior lawmaker who heads the Russian parliament’s defense committee, told Russia’s RTVI outlet that the report about the training was “complete nonsense” and that Russia’s military had nothing to learn from China.

China’s Lack Of Combat Experience

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Russia has accrued extensive experience in more than four years of combat in Ukraine, while China, with a vast and technologically advanced military, has not fought a war in decades.

Internal Russian military reports seen by Reuters noted strengths and weaknesses in the training.

One report on the training in Nanjing praised the standard of the equipment, the use of simulators and the instructors’ high theoretical knowledge while specifically noting China’s lack of combat experience.

Other documents named three generals who took part.

One Russian military document seen by Reuters listed the names of every participant in all of the courses – including those of senior officers – providing rank, date of birth, affiliation and level of security clearance in each case.

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Colonel General Rustam Muradov, deputy commander-in-chief of Russia’s land forces, led the Russian delegation, according to the list and a second military document seen by Reuters.

According to the latter, Chinese Major General Li Jinsun, head of the PLA’s Military Academy of Radiological, Chemical and Biological Defence, took part in the opening of one of the courses.

Russian Major General Vitaly Gerasimov took part in a course in Bengbu, according to the list.

(Editing by Mike Collett-White and Kevin Liffey)

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