Far from being ashamed of having convened all the powers of the State and shadowy affiliates to bring down Sánchez's government when he was invested by Catalan separatists in exchange for amnesty, Aznar boasts about it. It is understandable. The first time he tried to go down in history, it ended in tragedy.
Regarding the phrase that "whoever can do it, let them do it," yesterday he said that it “makes more sense than ever.” I don't know if the phrase makes sense, but those who don't get paid are the thousands of high and very high-ranking officials that the PP has not been able to appoint during the eight years of Sánchez's presidency, which are becoming eternal for the PP, so eternal that what is to come will not be a legislature but revenge. Not having the BOE machine is despairing. Even Feijóo, with the agility that characterizes him, dedicated a witty "whoever can steal, let them steal" to Sánchez last week in Congress. What a shame that Stephen Colbert no longer needs writers.
The PP is amazed that the PNB, Junts, or the left-wing parties that always cry out against corruption are not asking Sánchez for early elections. At least he has now learned that he cannot ask them for votes for a motion of no confidence alongside Vox. The entire investiture bloc has its own diverse interests (transfers, amnesty, positions, power in short) and is playing the lesser evil until the match burns their fingers.
Meanwhile, young people who cannot afford an apartment, teachers who are holding on as best they can, or families with a salary overwhelmed by the cost of living are waiting for someone to dedicate the same energy to demanding that the politician who can work for society, works for it.