

Ramón del Valle-Inclán (Vilanova de Arousa, 1866 - Santiago de Compostela, 1936) was a key figure in Spanish literature in the first third of the 20th century with works such as Lights of Bohemia, where she develops the theory of the grotesque. Since then, this word has been used to define tragicomic spectacles such as the one witnessed this Wednesday in a Madrid hotel with the appearance of the now former PSOE member Leire Díez and the appearance of the businessman accused of corruption, Víctor de Aldama, to rebuke her. But let's take it one step at a time.
The grotesque has already begun with Díez's intervention, lasting only eight minutes and without accepting questions from journalists, and in which she gave a bizarre version of her efforts to find dirt on the head of the UCO, the Civil Guard's investigative unit. According to her, the objective is to write a book about the dirty war. "You can be a socialist and a journalist," she said before ending with a "neither plumber nor coward".
Then came the highlight of the show, when Aldama stood up from the audience and walked towards her and booed her, causing chaos in a room full of cameras and microphones and the corresponding running and pushing. Mateos to Minister Boyer in 1989 or the ill-fated federal committee of the PSOE in 2017 to oust Pedro Sánchez. to help his party, which is clearly being attacked from the deep stateThe PSOE, in fact, announced tonight that it will forward the documentation Díez handed over to them on Tuesday to the Prosecutor's Office. But for the scandal to spill over into Ferraz, it would first have to be proven that he worked under Santos Cerdán's orders, and secondly, it's worth noting that none of the threats he made were carried out. The fact that the PSOE has decided to forward the documentation Díez handed over to them on Tuesday to the Prosecutor's Office only complicates the matter.
The Aldama case is even more suspicious, since he is a businessman who was released from prison, where he was provisionally held for the so-called Hydrocarbons case, after promising the Prosecutor's Office that he would provide evidence against the Spanish government in the Koldo case. Aldama is the one who allegedly leaked the recordings of Leire Díez, but so far he has not provided any conclusive evidence that compromises Sánchez or anyone in his entourage.
All of this, then, points to an alliance between this businessman investigated for corruption and the PP to instigate a campaign against the PSOE in which, for the moment, there is more bread than cheese. However, they are achieving one thing, and that is creating an unbreathable climate in which, instead of talking about the issues that affect people, some media are full of interested leaks or published accepting conditions from sources that are actually conspiracies and set-ups that sometimes seem to be led by characters from the TBOAnd so it turns out that Spain is one of the OECD countries with the greatest economic growth, but it has a serious housing problem, and on television, the ones who appear are the Villarejos, Aldamas, and Little Nicoláss who prosper in the Villa y Corte.