Madrid (EFE).- The economist Ramón Tamames, proposed by Vox as a candidate for the presidency of the Executive in the motion of no confidence, affirms in the draft of the speech that he will deliver on March 21 that the true government program would be “to prepare the general elections scheduled for December 2023, which would be good to bring forward to May 28, making them coincide with the municipal and regional ones”.
This is reported by elDiario.es, which has had access and publishes today the latest draft of the speech by the former leader of the PCE, in which he asks the Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez, to “take note” of his suggestion “whatever the result of this motion of censure”.
For Tamames, the electoral advance is necessary due to Sánchez’s desire to “divide the Spanish by trying to dictate the History of all nations to their liking with the alleged Democratic Memory, missing the truth with not a little partisanship and favoring an idealized second republic”.
A 31 page speech
El Diario.es reports that the speech consists of 31 pages: 30 chapters and a page for the conclusions. It addresses foreign policy and the relationship with Morocco, the “deterioration and recomposition of health”, the problem of nationalisms that want to “break Spain”, the economic situation of our country, or the attempt to control the judiciary, among others.
For the economist and Vox candidate, Spain “is more like a modern absorbing autocracy”, he will consider that in the Government “demagogy and populism frequently prevail” and he will regret that “from the blue bank” he refuses formations like Vox , “who represent millions of Spaniards, the democratic character”.
Tamames justifies his decision to accept Vox’s proposal in his desire to “personally pay my last tribute to the defense of the current and future interests of Spain.”
In his speech, Tamames will say that Pedro Sánchez is when the “constitutional architecture” that was closed in the Transition is most in danger, which, in his opinion, “has deformed the State of Autonomies itself, in which the main objective now of the separatist partners (of Sánchez) is to render useless article 2 of the Constitution on the indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation”.
For this reason, the economist will insist in his speech, “the urgent call for general elections is more necessary than ever” and to prevent President Pedro Sánchez from continuing to grant “the most harmful legislative assignments to certain of his partners in the investiture coalition who are putting that constitutional architecture of 1978 is at risk”.
In this sense, he will call for “a new government of the Nation” to propose a reform of the Electoral Law so that these parties do not achieve “the overrepresentation” that they enjoy, which gives them power to set up a government.
To avoid control of the Judiciary by the Executive, Tamames will propose that “the appointment of magistrates of the Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court have a lifelong character.”
Mention to the SMI, unemployment and the law of “only yes is yes”
He will criticize the President of the Government for the “abuse” of the decree laws “with 132 approved in the last four years, despite being an extraordinary instrument but for the President of the Government a normal procedure has already been carried out”, which, he will add, “deprives of the minimum parliamentary debate”.
According to the text released by elDiario.es, he will reproach the current government for creating legal uncertainty with its reform of the Penal Code, the “only yes is yes” law and other laws that in his opinion “are harmful to the country.”
The economist will consider that the increase in the Minimum Interprofessional Wage (SMI) is detrimental to “almost all small and medium-sized businesses in Spain”.
Unemployment, the slowdown in the growth rate and the increase in the CPI will be issues in which he will deepen his speech and describe as “a large-scale nonsense” the proposal of Podemos to cap the prices of at least 20 basic products of the food basket. the purchase.
Likewise, he will reproach Sánchez for his vision of the Civil War and will comment during his speech that “there is not a good and a bad side” and that “atrocities were committed on both sides.” “Trying to limit them now to practically just one of those sides is to be untrue and to throw away the 1977 Amnesty Law” to defend that “generations of Spaniards” do not want a conflict like the one that occurred in 1936 to occur again , will affirm the Vox candidate for president of the Government.
Ramón Tamames will thank the leader of Vox, Santiago Abascal, for the “great opportunity that he has given him to freely express” his “analysis of the situation in Spain” and before the deputies he will conclude his first intervention by saying: “I confess, ladies and gentlemen, the act of today is for me like one of the last sequences of the very script of my life”.