Ayuso and the most vulgar television

In recent days, Isabel Díaz Ayuso has been on an official trip to Mexico. The distance has prevented her from getting involved in the week's hottest news and the purpose of her transatlantic visit has been called into question. For this reason, as soon as she set foot in Spain, she needed an emergency loudspeaker to intervene, albeit with a delay, in all the controversies.Tuesday at noon, Nacho Abad welcomed her to En boca de todos, one of the most sensationalist and extreme programs on television. A space with a register not very suitable for presidential interviews. Abad, with a subservient attitude, prepared a script where Ayuso could practice her two favorite sports: victimhood and taking credit. As soon as they started, Abad gave her a compilation of the insults that her political adversaries had dedicated to her in recent days: "I am going to tell you what they have said about you: they have called you out of touch, ridiculous, grotesque, provocative, a persistent liar, and a recalcitrant victim". Meanwhile, she lowered her gaze afflicted, lamenting the aggressiveness of politics. Ayuso answered all the questions in a subdued tone and a childish attitude, as if repeating a lesson learned by heart to display her virtues. Nacho Abad kept serving her the topics on a platter for her to finish off with clarity: "Are we going to regularize criminals?", "Is there money for everyone?", "What is the national priority?". Questions that served her to launch into a political rally with the greatest hits of the most staunch right-wing, focusing on Spanish identity and the dangers of immigration. It is no coincidence. Emphasizing the security problems that immigration entails is one of Abad's obsessions in crime news. The presenter also pointed out that they were investigating Zapatero for collecting illegal commissions. ““Zapatero or laundromat?”, the program captioned on screen to provide context for the answer. They also showed him the Spanish government's criticisms for having neglected the hantavirus crisis, and Ayuso allowed herself the liberty of ridiculously imitating minister Ángel Víctor Torres for the messages he had sent her. She did the same with minister Mónica García, who will be her adversary in the next elections in Madrid. Faced with criticism for her trip to Mexico and the activities she had carried out there, Ayuso lashed out at president Claudia Sheinbaum for having boycotted her events and for putting her in danger during the trip. She described Mexico as a "narco-state" and warned that, with Pedro Sánchez in government, “Spain could become Mexico.”The television show catches the attention from the Catalan perspective. In Catalonia, we have become accustomed to the president of the Generalitat, whoever it may be, appearing in institutional interviews, formally very careful and prepared from the journalistic demand. It is a service to the citizen. What we saw on Cuatro was the complete opposite: a show for Ayuso to use for her own benefit, as a platform for propaganda and image laundering.