Perhaps one of the most anticipated head-to-head matches of the day was between Pedro Sanchez and Miriam Nogueras. The two men met for the first time this Wednesday in the House of Commons after a final ultimatum to the neoconvergent rebels – sorry for the wordiness. … Government, veto all ongoing legislative initiatives in Cortes. Pointing an arrow at Republican spokesperson Gabriel Ruffian in the middle – “I thought it was the last PSOE press secretary’s turn not to talk about Catalonia, but I didn’t remember that it was our turn,” said Deputy Press Secretary Juntz once in the gallery – Nogueras called the chief executive “cynical” and “hypocritical”.
“They won’t move unless we shut them out,” boasted Carles Puigdemont, a spokesman for the fugitive “former president.” He noted that the government’s decision to lift the law, which had been in a drawer since February last year, came just one day after repeated threats by separatists to abolish it, which had been included in Sánchez’s list of “non-compliance” for Catalonia and Catalan citizens. The presentations starting the consideration of the proposed amendments to the Code were convened this very Wednesday after the conclusion of the plenary session, in addition to the regular executive control session, during which the President briefed Cortés and the public about the recent international summits, including Spain’s presence in the Council of Europe, the state of public services, the governing capacity of the legislature, and the corruption surrounding the party and its immediate environment. The last two issues are at the request of the PP.
The example of the Multiple Recidivism Act is one of many examples Nogueras cited to dramatize what Sanchez does with all laws. “In public, we say the law is important and urgent, but in reality we just leave it in a drawer and take it out for a walk when we want a headline,” Sanchez charged. In this way, the Puigdemontists accuse the president of being solely responsible for the “blockade” of Congress, while at the same time blaming the president “rather than accepting responsibility” and trying to pin the president’s failures and responsibility on Janz. “He has no voice, he is only interested in power, and in order to maintain it he allies with those who suit him,” a neoconvergent spokesperson retaliated against Sanchez.
“This relationship is over. Perhaps in the parallel reality you live in, they complied. You are irresponsible, and the consequences of the violation are your responsibility, not Junto’s. Even their partners have come to accuse them of disobeying. What else will they do, other than complain? “They are unable to get the majority they need to govern and remain obstructed in Congress,” Nogueras continued. By the way, he reminded Sánchez that the PSOE lost the 23-J general election and that thanks to Junz he is the president of the government and not the national leader Alberto Nuñez Feijo. »It was we who stopped Spain from establishing the PP and Vox governments. So there are no lessons to be learned from you or your partner. ” he told the socialist, ultimately accusing him of “not taking advantage of the opportunity that came his way.” “All they had to do was follow Catalonia and the Catalan people. They didn’t.” Mr. Nogueras made Mr. Juntz look ugly, saying that Mr. Juntz “would not be the linchpin of the Spanish party in exchange for anything.” That’s why he asked Sanchez to explain how he plans to govern without the necessary majority. In Jantz’s eyes, something happened this week that didn’t happen Wednesday.
This is the same criticism that the PNV has expressed about the president’s intervention. « How do you plan to continue in the future? What is your roadmap? Maribel Baquero, the Penu Vista spokesperson who replaced Aitor Esteban as party president last April, called Sanchez’s speech a “rally.” However, Baquero wanted to distance himself from the triumphalist figures provided by “socialists who accuse them of using public services to attack their PP opponents” and “want to ensure that they do not correspond to social reality.” Gerzare acknowledges that Sanchez is a “resilient person who knows how to move well,” but warns that “resistance is not enough” and urges Congress to reasonably “build trust” as in recent months “Mr. Sanchez has been suffering on the way to the ICU.”