Sémper says that, after the “Sanchez show”, the Spanish have the right to express that they are “fed up” with this “egomaniacal policy”
MADRID, 6 May. (EUROPA PRESS) –
The PP has called on Spaniards to mobilize on May 26 in Madrid against the amnesty law, the “politics of hoaxes” of Pedro Sánchez and the “suspicion of corruption” that, in its opinion, weighs on the Government, the PSOE and the environment of the President of the Government, in reference to his wife, Begoña Gómez, who is being investigated for alleged influence peddling and corruption in business. The ‘popular’ say that it is an “open” act to which all those who want to “show their rejection of the worrying drift in which this Government is installed” can join.
The specific date was confirmed by the party’s spokesperson, Borja Sémper, in a press conference at the PP headquarters, after the party leader himself, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, had announced shortly before that the party would go out again. street in the second half of May to “defend democracy, judicial independence” and “freedom of the press.”
It would be the fifth mobilization called by the ‘popular’, who already gathered in Madrid in defense of the equality of the Spanish people and against the amnesty on four previous occasions: the Plaza de Felipe II on September 24; at Puerta el Sol on November 12; and the Temple of Debod on December 3; and the Plaza de España on January 28.
Sémper confirmed at a press conference that the next mobilization will be on May 26, in the middle of the electoral campaign for the European elections, which starts at midnight on May 23. According to what he said, a week after the “Sanchez show”, the Spaniards have “seen it” and have the right to express that they are “fed up” with this “egomaniacal” and “narcissistic policy.”
“The PP calls on all citizens to mobilize next day, May 26, to demonstrate against the amnesty, which will soon be approved in Congress, against Pedro Sánchez’s policy of hoaxes and against the suspicion of corruption regarding his Government, his party and his environment,” he declared.
Sémper has indicated that Spaniards who want to show their rejection of the worrying drift in which this Government and its president are installed have an appointment in less than three weeks in Madrid. For now, the party has not decided where it will be place this new protest.
Sémper has accused Sánchez of wanting to establish himself as “the leader of the most radical space in Spanish politics, despising the whole” but has stressed that the Spaniards “have already caught on to the trick” of the President of the Government. In his opinion, “this type of overacting and shocks do not cause the impact” that he seeks.
As he said, the Spanish “have the right to be fed up, tired and exhausted of this policy that seeks confrontation” and “clash”, seeking to obtain a role that “should be obtained through management.” In their opinion, they also have the right to “say it.”
“The Spaniards and Spanish politics do not deserve this exercise of selfish politics and they have the right to say it. We have the right to say it. We have the right to say that the President of the Government has lied to us and that does not make us dangerous radicals,” he stated.
Sémper has stressed that the Spanish “deserve a President of the Government who calls Spaniards to a common national project, a common and shared project, not a President of the Government who raises walls, who disappears for five days and who tries to of these crude marketing exercises to divert attention from the extraordinary problems that your Government continues to have,” he added.
At this point, he said that they cannot “feel more ashamed” of how the President of the Government “exercises his high honor, which should be, that of doing politics without playing with feelings.” “Do politics with rigor, with seriousness, as adults do and as responsible politicians do,” she added.
When asked about the statements of the Popular Group spokesperson in Congress, Miguel Tellado, ensuring that anyone could call Pedro Sánchez an “autocrat”, Sémper agreed with Tellado in that assertion because “anyone is free to call the President of the Government an autocrat.” “.
“It is a political description of a way of functioning and behaving that is embarrassing us and worrying us. Never before in Spanish democratic history, never before in Spanish democratic history have we had a President of the Government who stated that he wanted to build a wall among Spaniards. Never before in Spanish democratic history have we had a president who lied so much and on so many issues,” he stated.