Video game with immigrants

The president of the Canary Islands, Fernando Clavijo, has contradicted the statements made by the president of the Balearic Islands, Marga Prohens, and wanted to make it clear that "in no way is the situation in the Balearic Islands comparable to that of the Canary Islands", as you can read in the Chronicle by Anna Mascaró in itNow the Balearic IslandsIn Clavijo's tone—a member of the Canary Islands Coalition—one senses a certain binge of Prohensian demagoguery, constantly comparing the arrival of small boats on the Balearic coast with the massive influxes in the Canary Islands, or even with those on the Italian island of Lampedusa. Prohens doesn't care: everything is ammunition to fire at the Spanish government and the hated Pedro Sánchez (hatred on demand: at the headquarters on Génova Street they indicate who to hate, and with what intensity, and the PP delegations in each community begin to radiate hatred according to instructions). While playing the victim and making inconsistent comparisons, the Balearic president continues to govern with the far-right Vox, a significant part of the problem. She has had—and surely still has—the option of agreeing on policies with the opposition groups, the Socialists, and Més per Mallorca. But until now, Vox has always been chosen as a partner, and recently, in the mid-term review, it has strengthened its position. This is due to the fact that decisions on agreements and alliances are not made in the Consulate of the Sea, but in Madrid.

It's quite possible that Clavijo's protest is a response to another immigration-related issue, one with which the Popular Party has engaged in demagoguery that is harmful to the interests of the Canary Islands and also socially poisonous: the distribution by autonomous communities of unaccompanied minors arriving in the Canary Islands via the boat routes. The autonomous communities governed by the PP refuse to take in the young people allotted to them; the Balearic Islands, in particular, refuse to take in the 49 people allotted to them, citing a "lack of capacity." The comment speaks volumes. Furthermore, the PP's resistance to this distribution of unaccompanied minors has led to the regions having to do so by decree law. peperas They appeal to the Supreme Court, which is now "their" highest court of reference. The judicialization of politics therefore remains the course of action.

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The distribution of unaccompanied minors has also served the men The PP's regional governments, and Prohens in particular, are trying to inject the inevitable dose of Catalanophobia into the issue: since Catalonia isn't included in the decree law, they're taking advantage of it to claim they want the same for their regions. They're deliberately forgetting (because they know better) that neither Catalonia nor the Basque Country are bound by the decree law, as they've already implemented leading Spanish-level reception policies and actions, and in quite commendable numbers. It's objectively unpleasant to see how politics continues to be played like someone playing a Martian-killing video game, when what's at stake are things like social cohesion and human dignity.