Spanish media is denied its Royal Decree delay injunction

Spanish media is denied its Royal Decree delay injunction

Spain’s approved ‘Royal Decree of Advertising’, will not be delayed or modified, as the Supreme Tribunal strikes down an injunction launched by Spanish media trade union the ‘Asociación de Medios de Información’ (AMI).

On Friday, the ‘commercial disputes chamber’ of Spain’s Supreme Tribunal, rejected AMI’s appeal to postpone the 1 May enforcement of the Royal Decree’s blanket ban on gambling advertising which will be sanctioned across all traditional media formats – TV, radio and press.

Challenging the Royal Decree, AMI had argued that Spain’s traditional broadcast incumbents had been commercially penalised by a ‘discriminatory timetable’ as online competitors would be given until 1 August to comply with Spanish advertising’s new federal orders.

AMI had demanded that Spain’s Consumer Affairs Ministry amend the decree’s enforcement dates, as traditional broadcasters had been ‘economically hindered’ losing out on key sports programming related to the UEFA Euro 2021 Championships and the Tokyo Olympics.

On Friday, the commercial disputes chamber chose not to forward AMI’s injunction to the Supreme Tribunal, stating that its appeal did not justify the delay of an approved Federal order being implemented across Spain’s 17 autonomous communities.

In its judgement, the chamber stated that AMI had solely focused its appeal on the ‘economic consequences’ of the Royal Decree, which had been federally approved as public health and advertising standards order.

The chamber stated that commercial and economic adjustments of the decree, would be assumed by all industry and public stakeholders beyond sports programming, as AMI’s injunction held no grounds to be forwarded to Spain’s highest-ranking law court.

As the Royal Decree maintains its summer timetable, the Chamber defined that it is “a general provision that must be complied with by all those affected, whose validity cannot be questioned based on interests other than those of the public interest.”


Source: SBC News