The 'moment' Miriam Nogueras with the Pope and the disappearance of Aznar

Pope Leo XIV is applauded at the end of his speech during his visit to the Spanish Courts, next to Francina Armengol, president of the Congress of Deputies of Spain and Pedro Rollan, president of the Senate
Upd. 10
3 min

MadridAt eight in the morning, twenty PP deputies were already queuing to enter the Congress of Deputies. On days when there is a joint session with the Senate, the hemicycle becomes small and it is difficult to fit. And this Monday, which was a historic day in Madrid, some were afraid of not finding a seat. The Pope's visit is an exceptional mobilization of resources and organization, even for those accustomed to dealing with state and international authorities. For the reader to get an idea: while Leo XIV arrived at 10:30 at the Carrera de San Jerónimo, Congress opened its doors at 7:30 so that both parliamentarians and journalists could enter and have the necessary accreditations (to reach this day, considerable paperwork has been required). Furthermore, although the press normally moves up and down with some freedom around the hemicycle and the courtyard of Congress, this Monday the place to follow the event had to be chosen: the courtyard to see the arrival accompanied by music; the tribune inside the hemicycle or from the usual press facilities. What's more: at the end of the ceremony, the deputies had to wait a few minutes inside the plenary until the Pope's entourage dispersed to be able to circulate normally.

From the Congress tribune, the view was privileged. When Leo XIV entered the plenary session, a sepulchral silence fell. A concession that parliamentarians rarely grant to any speaker who takes the podium. However, just a few seconds earlier, it was not like this: the deputies seated in their seats were watching live the pontiff's arrival at Congress on the voting screen and commenting on the handshake that each of the parliamentary spokespersons had with the Pope. Alberto Nuñez Feijóo, Gabriel Rufián, Patxi López, Verónica Martínez Barbero... The longest was with the spokesperson for Junts, Miriam Nogueras: "I am Catalan. Speaking the language of the place that welcomes you is an act of love and respect," she told him in English after the controversy over the extent to which the pontiff would speak Catalan, Gaudí's language. Leo XIV looked at the leader of Junts and nodded with a smile. In Catalonia, where the visit to the Sagrada Família will be the central point, it will be known whether the response was due to protocol or because he shares the reflection. The spokesperson for ERC, Gabriel Rufián, called the act "empty of content": "Banal nationalism." "I took advantage of having the full focus to put Catalonia and Catalan at the center," Nogueras defended.

The conversation between Illa and Rajoy in waiting time

From half-past nine in the morning, the hemicycle was almost full and deputies and senators were entertaining themselves while waiting for the pontiff. The journalists, in turn, carefully read the speech of Leo XIV, already selecting headlines and observing the guests. Among them, the President of the Generalitat, Salvador Illa, who was one of the first to make an appearance. Later, former presidents José María Aznar and Mariano Rajoy arrived, who spent the time standing and chatting until almost the start time. Once seated, Illa and Rajoy could be seen talking in a relaxed manner: from a distance, it seemed they were discussing a mundane issue like football, but the conversation turned to "an update" about the family. There was no interaction, on the other hand, between the President of the Generalitat and José María Aznar, the author of the phrase that marked the Spanish legislature with quien pueda hacer que haga. In fact, the former Spanish president vanished as soon as the Pope's speech began: he had a flight scheduled, but he wanted to make an appearance at least at the beginning.

Aznar disappeared this Monday like the judicial cases that plague the PSOE in conversations in the corridors of Congress. The pontiff's visit was a true parenthesis in the midst of the storm and, with the exception of some corrillo, the conversations were neither about Zapatero's jewels – absent, incidentally, from the event – nor about Leire Díez, nor about the presence of the Civil Guard at the headquarters in Ferraz street. What was being discussed was the Pope's speech: for some, a hard blow to the PP and Vox for their discourse on welcoming migrants, for others a complete rejection of the left's positions regarding the right to abortion and euthanasia. pearl they like best. Of course, the end was a contest of applause between the right and the left for more than seven minutes: no one wanted to be the first to stop... for fear of what could be interpreted.

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