

The Koldo-Ábalos-Santos Cerdán scandal, or whatever it should be called, has begun its judicial process, and that means that from now on, we will witness the live account, as if it were a sports competition, of the defense strategies of each of these hooligans. If they form alliances, if they fight, if they contradict each other, if they remain silent, if they turn on the fans. It's the same fairground we've seen spinning so many times, only here it's not about attractions with lights, but about crimes, criminals, and the ways in which each one tries to evade justice and shift the blame onto others. They've accepted this, their defenses—whether they come from the CUP (United Left) or wherever—have accepted this. This is how the Spanish political system works, which, when it comes to corruption, is exactly the same as the Catalan political system.
The serious thing is that we citizens also accept it. Right now, the Spanish government cannot act without having to keep an eye on the judicial misadventures of former high-ranking officials, and everything that may follow. This is a serious problem, to which must be added the enthusiasm with which some judges have long been willing to collaborate in the demolition of Sanchismo: just today we learned that the insufferable Judge Peinado wants to charge Minister Bolaños for whatever he has decided to charge him with.
Of course, nothing happens for no reason. Last December, shortly before Christmas, Feijóo predicted a "judicial hell" for Sánchez by 2025, and more or less expressed his confidence that it would be the judges who would bring down the current Spanish president. The path to judicialization of politics began a long time ago, at least from the moment the PP, with the applause of the nationalist sectors of the Spanish left, took the Statute of Catalonia to the Constitutional Court, with the result we all know. Since then, the Spanish justice system has become a machine for pushing democracy wherever it wants at any given moment.
Feijóo, now puffing out his chest, is joining in with the latest slander launched by the slimy Aznar, which is insinuating electoral fraud in the 2023 elections. We now call this Trumpism, but we can also call it ruining everything to come to power by any means necessary. The sudden accusation comes from those who not only made the dead vote, as Yolanda Díaz opportunely pointed out, but also made Latin American citizens who were descendants of Spaniards (Mallorcans, to be precise) vote, or who had organized real collection services to "accompany" them to the polling stations (this was before letting them die in the same nursing homes, as happened in Madrid, because, as President Ayuso said, "they should die anyway").
Needless to say, all this is damaging to democracy. However, he warns that the people who benefit most from this filth are not the PP but Vox, the parasite that the PP itself has been feeding for so many years.