Malaga (EFE) of the Government chaired by Pedro Sánchez.
Bendodo, who has intervened in a party event in Fuengirola (Málaga), has assured that the next municipal and regional elections at the end of May are going to be general elections because in them they are going to debate Sánchez’s policies such as the elimination of crime of sedition or the law of only yes is yes.
“On May 28, we must say no to Sánchez’s policies,” Bendodo insisted in relation to the “pardon for the coup plotters in Catalonia” or the elimination of crimes of sedition that “the same Catalan leaders who were convicted of use public money to go against Spain”, he lamented.
Regarding the law of only yes is yes, which has stated that “it has already caused 250 rapists and sexual offenders to have their sentences reduced”, he has opined that this is a “botch” that the PSOE partner in the Government has proposed , United We Can, a party that “serves to protest, but not to govern.”
“What figure do we have to reach?” lamented Bendodo, who stated that “never had a government in a democracy put the safety of women so at risk” and insisted that the law must be changed and that “it is It is a shame that the days go by and the trickle of reductions in sentences for rapists continues” and the Government “continues with its arms crossed without moving a muscle.”
The general coordinator of the PP has stated that the Government clings to “a legislature without norms” and has urged the Spaniards to seek on May 28 “the revolution of moderation” in the figure of the president of the popular party, Alberto Núñez Feijóo , which is “the personal antithesis” of Sánchez.
According to Bendodo, Feijóo’s values are different from those of Sánchez, since -according to him- he raises “humility in the face of arrogance”, “solvency in the face of improvisation”, “unity in the face of division”, “constitutional firmness in the face of outrage” and “moderation in the face of a radical government.”

The PP accuses Sánchez of attacking the tourism sector
The general coordinator of the PP, Elías Bendodo, has regretted that the central executive has launched twelve plans financed by European funds and there are none for tourism, “a main industry for the country that both in the previous crisis and in the current is managing to pull the economy”.
“The tourism sector does not interest Pedro Sánchez in the least,” said Bendodo. The general coordinator of the Popular Party recalled that the Government says that this industry “has little added value” when it “accounts for 13 percent of the Spanish economy.”