
SUMAR, a left-wing parliamentary group in Spain’s Congress, has introduced a “non-legislative proposal” asking the Spanish government to amend Law 1/2004 on Commercial Hours in order to strengthen Sunday and holiday rest protections. The term “non-legislative proposal” means that the amendment is not yet law; rather, it is a formal motion asking Congress to urge the government to act by modifying the current law and imposing tighter restrictions on Sunday commerce.
Amendment #161/003499, which seeks to guarantee the “right to Sunday rest and the enjoyment of family life,” was introduced on May 26, 2026, and was later referred to the Industry and Tourism Committee and placed on the legislative agenda for debate on June 9, 2026. The central concern is that modern commerce, tourism, shopping centers, and the 24/7 economy are eroding Sunday rest, family life, and workers’ ability to share a common day of rest. The proposal states that Sunday and holiday rest must be protected through the regulation of commercial opening hours.
The official Spanish Congressional legislative website tracker states the following:
• “XV Legislature, Non-legislative, proposal in Committee. Non-legislative proposal to amend Law 1/2004, on Business Hours, to guarantee the right to Sunday rest and the enjoyment of family life. (#161/003499).” [1]
Spain’s official Congressional Legislative Bulletin published on June 9, 2026, states the following:
• “Committee on Industry and Tourism, #161/003499 – Non-Legislative Proposal submitted by the Plurinational Parliamentary Group SUMAR, amending Law 1/2004, on Commercial Hours, to guarantee the right to Sunday rest and the enjoyment of family life.” [2]
An official summary of the Sunday initiative, as presented by the Spanish Congress, states the following:
• “What is the initiative about? The proposal from the Plurinational Parliamentary Group SUMAR aims to amend Law 1/2004 on Business Hours to strengthen the right to Sunday rest and family time. Among the proposed changes are: a maximum of eight business openings on Sundays and public holidays nationwide; a 50% limit on the increase in openings in high-traffic tourist areas; the possibility for Autonomous Communities to reduce this number; and the creation of criteria and procedures for declaring, adapting, or eliminating ‘high-traffic tourist areas,’ with the obligation for municipalities to submit proposals within six months of the declaration.” [3]
This is a highly significant issue because Sunday is being protected under the language of labor rights. The proposal calls for the state to regulate commerce by preserving Sunday as a special social institution. Through civil law, Spain is seeking to make Sunday rest a public good by limiting store openings, restricting tourist exemptions, and prioritizing family life over commercial activity.
The objective is to establish Sunday closure as the standard practice, permitting only a minimal amount of Sunday business activity. Specifically, the proposal asks the government to change the law so that stores may open on no more than 8 Sundays or per year. Even “high-traffic” tourist zones would be restricted, because their Sunday and holiday openings could not increase by more than 50% above that limit, meaning popular tourist areas could legally open on no more than 12 Sundays per year.
It also gives local and regional governments the authority to reduce Sunday openings even further “to guarantee greater rest time.” Those seeking special tourist-zone status would be required to justify the request while taking into account the need to protect Sunday rest and family life. If local authorities determine that the request is not justified, the tourist-zone designation would be rejected, and Sunday commerce would remain restricted.
These Sunday restrictions are coming to America very soon, especially as there is a growing push to place Christianity back at the center of public life. Spain’s model reflects the very kind of policy that many in America are seeking to revive. The proposal presents Sunday rest as a public-good issue by limiting store openings, restricting tourist-zone exceptions, and declaring that the state must protect Sunday rest and family life through the regulation of commercial hours.
In the United States, the groundwork already exists. America has a long history of blue laws, which restricted shopping, work, alcohol sales, and other activities on Sunday. At the same time, our nation is experiencing a revival of Christianity both in society and in our politics. The Rededicate 250 event on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on May 17, 2026, was promoted as a national jubilee of prayer and worship ahead of America’s 250th birthday, with major religious and political participation.
We are also seeing renewed calls for a common day of rest. In January 2026, the Heritage Foundation’s Saving America agenda reportedly called for restoring blue laws in order to establish Sunday as the uniform day of rest. This is why Spain’s proposal matters. It shows a modern, secularized government considering Sunday protection through commercial law—and in America, the same arguments and desires are already present.
The same spirit seeking to restore Sunday rest is already operating in America. It may not arrive first as an openly religious decree. Instead, it may come dressed in the language of compassion, family values, labor rights, public health, and national healing. But once the government begins to exalt Sunday as the legally protected day of rest, the issue moves directly into the territory of prophetic fulfillment: civil power enforcing a man-made day in place of the commandments of God.
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