Susana Díaz, on Tele 5
13/02/2026
2 min

Revenge is a dish best served cold and the PSOE senator Susana Díaz took advantage of Risto Mejide's program, Todo es mentira, to attack Pedro Sánchez with the excuse of having publicly criticized Iker Jiménez. “The president of the government, neither in the tribune of Congress nor in any other, should point out any media. It is unnecessary and is not in accordance with the representation he holds,” she said against the one who frustrated her aspirations to become the party leader despite having the pro-PSOE media machinery against her, starting with El País. From this humble column, we can do nothing but applaud Díaz's moral teachings, who bravely positions herself against finger-pointing. Everyone knows that this dirty work against journalists must be done in secret and treachery. Nothing is more effective than a good dagger in the back at the opportune moment. Mariló Montero explained it, for example, accusing her live on an Antena 3 program of having maneuvered to get her fired from Canal Sur. Álvaro Zancajo, former director of news at this same television, also revealed in a column that he was approached in a bar by Díaz and, according to his account, she told him: “Get ready, we are coming for you, Zancajo. What awaits you will be much worse.” A few months later, he was dismissed. It’s not that the two journalists were pure beings without biases, but Díaz knows that bringing this matter into the mud runs the risk of not achieving what you want and ending up very dirty. Given the situation, the only thing Sánchez can be criticized for is, as Mónica Planas pointed out very well in her review here in the newspaper, having given ammunition to this seller of smoke, or rather, disinformation toxic gas, so that he can play the victim. Dear Sánchez, learn from Díaz: pointing is for the poor.

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