All or nothing. With one vote. Yesterday, the government faced another difficult vote in parliament, but the vote ended in a positive outcome. At the end of the plenary session, there was a look of satisfaction among President Pedro Sánchez’s entourage. “What we saved was … It was a week marked by a solo appearance by the chief executive and apparently painless votes on several amendments in the Senate. The perfect thermometer to test the validity of “farewell” announced by Jantz.
After Wednesday’s very tough speech, Miriam Nogueras called him “cynical” and “hypocritical” and reaffirmed that “this relationship is over.” Just 24 hours later, Mr. Juntz put oxygen back into the auxiliary ventilator that kept Mr. Sanchez politically alive. The government believes that this is not a specific problem, as post-convergence people try to justify, but rather that it shows that division is not real.
“We will continue to bring initiatives to Congress, and we believe we can move forward with proposals that you like.”they said in the Executive Office, which has always given very relative weight to Junz’s orders and believes that this order is motivated by the imminent CEO (Catalan CIS) to give Alianza Catalunya a strong electoral promotion. “This is a parliament in which the Spaniards voted, and one thing is what is said, and the other is what is done; “It shows that politics is not ‘Game of Thrones,’ after all,” the same source reported.hinting at the epicness that is sought to be given to each of the opponent’s moves.
In any case, Moncloa has no intention of changing its roadmap. As evidence of this, no changes will be made to the annual regulatory plan, a compilation of legislative projects that the government will put into its portfolio over the coming months. In the executive branch, they went from downplaying Janz’s challenge and making sure they were looking for “media focus” and “round phrases in the news” to adopting an almost therapeutic posture: the couch of psychoanalysis. “We listen to them, respect them and recognize the new state of things.”they point out.
In response to the final onslaught, an outstretched hand, a willingness to interact, and screens to follow each other. “We are not going to force a dialogue on them,” they say. At the same time, a campaign in Luxembourg regarding the approval of the amnesty law by the CJEU Advocate General allowed Moncloa to once again defend before his interlocutors that the government was “compliant” and that disputed matters were in the hands of other actors, in this case the Court of Justice.