In this third part of the interview, Antonio Lepulo, who was once again appointed General Secretary of the Andalusian PP after the regional conference, emphasizes the “correct and transparent” management of the breast cancer screening crisis by the local government.
– … The screening crisis was the most difficult moment for this second military regime. where are you now?
– It’s at the point of resolution and there should be a problem. When a problem arises, we must take a course of action, implement an emergency plan, accept political responsibility and define a roadmap to resolve the problem with full transparency. We have gone from a government that knew nothing to one that briefed us weekly on how the situation was developing.
People no longer remember the coronavirus, but they must remember what the situation was like that Pedro Sánchez put us in every day, and what the management of Juanma Moreno in the Andalusian military regime was like. Absolute transparency. The Andalusians knew minute by minute what was happening. And drought is exactly the same.
When problems arise with Pedro Sánchez’s government, there is no resolution, no transparency, and no acceptance of responsibility.
-Do you really feel that you might be able to become even stronger within the party?
-I am confident that the management team will be evaluated positively in this matter. I feel that more and more Andalusians are trying to use it for something as important as health. It is not wrong to think that the medical system is not working. That’s really outrageous. This outrage is a deterrent to many doctors, many medical workers, and many people who sacrifice their lives for the most important thing for humans: health.
Both the PSOE and Vox are trying to exploit this issue for political gain through noise and outrage. Socialists have never worried or worried about health. He has no memory of exactly what María Jesús Montero did when she was his counselor.
-Do you think that with transparency, with so much data being communicated every day, you can counteract the opposition’s message?
-They are data and reality. When you talk to a woman in Cordoba about breast cancer prevention, she tells you that she was treated, her problem was discovered, and her life was saved. That is the reality in Andalusia. More and more preventive measures are being taken to prevent health systems from collapsing, such as vaccinations and promoting active living.
Spain does not have a national agreement and all autonomous communities have this problem. It lacked foresight, did not take into consideration the large number of retired doctors, and did not have sufficient infrastructure in place. Our public healthcare environment is terrible and we need to consider where we come from.