

1. Pedro Sánchez ignores Núñez Feijóo by confronting Trump. As a hyperbolic move to try to escape corruption, it's not a bad idea. A good attempt to distract attention. If the leader of the Popular Party can't even take advantage of this socialist corruption scandal, which would have brought down any government with a shred of ethics, it's a sign that things are starting to turn sour. With Núñez Feijóo disoriented, Isabel Díaz Ayuso's time is getting closer every day, despite the suspicion of wholesale corruption on the part of her partner and despite the 7,291 deaths of elderly people in Madrid nursing homes who were denied transfer to hospitals in recent months. Therefore, the closer he feels to his goal, the more he refines his strategy. As a puppet of Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, who manipulates her wherever he wants, Ayuso has already realized that the most basic populism brings glory, and that Catalanophobia may not yet bring victory, but it does garner a handful of sympathies. Last Thursday in the Madrid Assembly, she delivered another indecent monologue, applauded by the usual clappers and praised by the media cavern.
2. Díaz Ayuso, wrapped in the flag of Spanish nationalism, responded to Gonzalo Miró, who upon receiving the Ramón Rubial Communication Award in Bilbao had said the following: "If I knew how to speak Basque, I would have accepted the award in Basque. Don't think we're all equally ignorant in Madrid.". The president of the Community of Madrid, perceptive as she is, took it personally and unleashed her tirade in Parliament: "Do you know what's so ignorant? They drop out and don't send them to school. That's the most ignorant thing."Lie after lie, and it envelops you, making you stronger. Look where you are, the Popular Party seems convinced that returning to the Moncloa will be easier if it leads the campaign against"the earpiecethat if it delves into the corruption of the PSOE, why is it that they can't get their hands dirty on this issue?
3. One leg, according to the RAE dictionary, it is a village or one hickWe would say a pallús or a short of gambales. These kinds of people are everywhere and they speak any language. Or flatterers of their policies, out of fear or self-interest. Sometimes they even return to power thanks to democracy and the forgetfulness of the voters. Iranians. He hasn't ended the war in Ukraine—as he said he would in a week—nor has he put a stop to the barbarity in Gaza, nor anything at all. We should dump the old junk, the imperial obsessions of runaway leaders, this trendy manual of fixing the world with missiles and weapons, and all those stories that foment hatred on a small and large scale.