

A state without democracy, a president equated to hood of the mafia or a Spain that lives in a pretended dictatorship. This is the dangerous dialectic that the PP has settled into, which it hopes will eventually overthrow Pedro Sánchez and catapult the party to the Moncloa Palace. It's about taking attacks on the Spanish government to the limit ("Sánchez and his people") and proclaim themselves, immediately, as the solution for "decency" to govern Spain again. This is what the Popular leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, promised this Sunday during the demonstration in Madrid, which has once again been an example that anything goes (insults, accusations, insinuations ...) to bring down an adversary.
When it came to speeches, they returned the two faces of a party that needs (as the polls tell them, it seems) the outbursts of Díaz Ayuso to retain the vote that Vox can snatch away. Despite the explicit slogan of the demonstration - "Mafia" - they put aside the strongest words and sell centrality, but without losing the belligerent tone that is now the party's trademark: "Mr. Sánchez, surrender to democracy. "Call elections now," he demanded in yet another blow from the microphone.
With the letter of the motion of censure annulled due to lack of support that would make it viable to unseat Sánchez and with economic indicators that, today, do not give him ammunition to attack the Spanish government, what is left for the Spanish government? tension. If in the previous calls the amnesty law was the reason for calling for mobilization, this Sunday's one clings to the supposed dirty war of the Leire case and the doubts about how much Ferraz was aware of it. marking distances with the socialists. It is still curious to hear accusations of "corruption" and "sewers" with former president Mariano Rajoy in the front row, brought down by a motion of censure after the conviction in the Gürtel case and which had the government, Interior Commander, Minister Fernández D.
By hiding the party flags and asking the protesters (many of whom had come by bus from all over Spain) to display the Spanish flag, the PP is seeking, in the process, to enter into a hand-to-hand fight with Vox in order to establish themselves as the annihilators of Sanchismo. "Diaz Ayuso knows this differently," the Madrid president has maintained the tone of contempt that she had already made explicit on Friday at the Conference of Presidents: "Spain is not plurinational. We are not foreigners in our house. Those who have expelled the Spanish for fabricating new identities are the ones who are unnecessary." Sánchez "democratically," Ayuso went on to insinuate that Spain is today, in reality, "a dictatorship" and making a comparison with Venezuela, where "there are ballot boxes, but no democracy." Words that sound rather empty and are contradicted by the facts.