Madrid (EFE).- The candidate for the Presidency of the Government Ramón Tamames has defended today his “absolute independence” in the speech that he will carry out to defend the motion of censure and has highlighted that the “common denominator” with Vox is “the parliamentary monarchy, the unity of Spain and the flag”.
Speaking to the media, before attending a colloquium at the Royal Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, he recalled that it has always been a “sine qua non” and “essential” requirement to stand as a candidate for the motion of no confidence, which It will be debated in Congress on March 21 and 22.
To questions from journalists, Tamames has avoided talking about his discrepancies with the party led by Santiago Abascal and has appealed to “the logical principles” of the constitutional values that both he and one of the drafters of the Magna Carta, like Vox, a party that has been defined as “constitutionalist”, they must defend.
Tamames downplays Vox’s claim about “the worst government in history”
On whether he thinks that the coalition executive “is the worst government in history” as Vox maintains in his speech, Tamames has played down the importance of the statement and has considered that the dialectical strategy in politics tends “always to exaggerate” and “underline ” certain issues to “get attention”.
“I do not participate in epithets to any person if there is no reason to do it in a direct and personal way,” he has settled.
Likewise, Tamanes has explained that he has been preparing the speech for “a month” and that “every day” he adds or removes an issue, since “preparing a speech has its substance”, while he has assured that “it is still being studied” the place that he will occupy in Congress during the debate, a matter that he will deal with on Thursday with the Chamber in coincidence with the press conference that he will offer together with Abascal to explain “the objectives of the motion of censure.”