Well yes, that's the Valencian PP.

BarcelonaSuddenly, the statement before the judge by former Valencian Minister of the Interior and Justice, Salomé Pradas, has shown that the king has no clothes on his back, and that politicians, in reality, don't know much about anything and are puppets of the technicians. Pradas has no problem admitting that she is incompetent ("I'm just a law graduate with no experience in emergencies") because she believes that this is how she will avoid criminal liability. The reasoning is very simple: she cannot be responsible for the deaths of 228 people during the DANA (Recovery and Emergency Situation) because, in fact, she didn't even know that her job was to save them. This was the work, she says, of the technicians "with 100 years of experience" who were there. But then why was a year earlier, with the same technicians, a DANA (Recovery and Emergency Situation) in the Vega Baja managed completely differently with Ximo Puig as president?

Pradas's statement is a judicial bombshell, but also a political one. Judicial because it's not clear that justice will buy his story, as it would be tantamount to admitting that politicians aren't responsible for anything they do. But above all, it's a bombshell because it crystal-clearly exposes the conception of politics held by many, surely most, of the leaders of the Valencian People's Party (PP). Starting with Carlos Mazón, who that day felt there was nothing to worry about until nightfall, when there was nothing left to do, and who, three months earlier, had appointed Pradas as the ideal person to ensure the safety of the people of Valencia.