He says they are reforming the administration

While we were trying to breathe in the heat that kept us awake, the smoke from the fires, and the Spanish political turmoil, which has now reached the level of saunas and brothels, a piece of good news slipped through the narrow bars of news that make headlines: the administrative reform promoted by the Government will soon go to Parliament.

It seems that the prior appointment, the incomprehensible language and having to provide the same documentation more than once will disappear (there are insane cases, like when they ask you year after year for the death certificate of a relative, as if people could die more than once) or you will be warned of bureaucratic paralysis when a civil servant says they are afraid to sign something. It seems to me so much common sense to get here that it's incredible we are not there yet, but seeing the bread that is given in an administration that is only quick to collect fines and taxes, what seems even more incredible is that it could be true.

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Because to achieve these and other changes, much more than a change is needed, a whole cultural revolution is needed that puts an end to a principle that has not disappeared with either democracy or the digital revolution, which is that all those administered know that we bother the administration. Officials blame the legislature, and government officials aren't willing to tear down the wall of bureaucracy. And this cultural revolution demands that civil servants' lifelong job security be exchanged for flexibility to adapt to the needs of the times and increase productivity. But despite this justifying skepticism, and amid so many disasters, we are facing good news.