Toledo (EFE).- The Minister of the Presidency and Secretary for Constitutional Reform and New Rights of the PSOE, Félix Bolaños, considers it “very serious” that the PP is not clear “where the democrats are and where the extreme right” and has criticized their abstention in the motion of censure presented by Vox, a party “that wants to outlaw political parties that do not think like them.”
In an act of the PSOE with public representatives this Sunday in the city of Cuenca, Bolaños said that this week “will be a great opportunity” for the Government of Pedro Sánchez to explain what it is doing and what the rest of the legislature will continue to do. and all the legislatures that the citizenship allows.
“We are waiting for the debate on the motion of no confidence to begin, hoping that Spaniards can see the two ideas of Spain that exist,” said Bolaños, who has contrasted the Spain of the Sánchez government, which he has said is reflected in higher scholarships, guaranteed pensions and a decent minimum wage, and the opposition, a “right and extreme right” that defends the cuts.
He has criticized that the Spanish right and extreme right is “anchored in the past” and only aspires to “repeal everything and push the country back”.
On the position of the PP in the motion of no confidence, it has been asked “how is it possible” that Alberto Núñez Feijóo abstains in the motion presented by a party “that wants to outlaw political parties that do not think like them” in addition to “finishing ” with the public pension system and “incarcerate” women who voluntarily interrupt their pregnancy.
Félix Bolaños has stressed that “no European conservative party” would abstain in a similar situation, and has said that the PP does so to be able to “go on its knees” before Vox after the regional and municipal elections on May 28 and to be able to make governments adding .
PP: Vox “has scored an own goal” with the motion of censure
The general coordinator of the PP, Elías Bendodo, affirmed this Sunday that, by presenting the motion of censure, Vox “has scored an own goal and has given Pedro Sánchez a victory in injury time.”
Bendodo believes that it is “counterproductive to give Sánchez a victory”, because the motions of no confidence “are presented to win them and throw out the one who is there, not to reinforce and prop him up.”
For the popular leader, Sánchez “deserves two or three motions of censure for the damage he is doing to Spain”, but “the motion of censure will be made by all Spaniards on May 28”, when the municipal elections are held.
That day the mayors will be elected, “but it will also be a general election to say no loud and clear to the policies of Sánchez, who does not deserve an oxygen balloon when he is suffocating the country.”
He has stressed that “the only party in Spain with a moderate and reformist project is the PP”, compared to a PSOE that “has thrown itself into the mountains and has become radicalized, mainly due to its desperation”.
“One begins to lose the Government when one settles in arrogance, and that is Sánchez”, said Bendodo, who added that the PSOE “in desperation has changed its motto again, because it began with ‘The Government of the people ‘ and the people dismantled the motto, because it was the Government against the people”.
He stressed that the new motto is “Defend what you think”, and the Spaniards are going to tell him “what they think, that it is a shame that it has weakened the Spanish State by eliminating sedition, that it has made corruption crimes cheaper and that the The self-proclaimed feminist government is the one that has done the most damage to women with the law of only yes is yes”.
According to Bendodo, Sánchez “only has the Tezanos polls left”, because all the polls “say that the PP wins the elections except one, the one signed by a PSOE affiliate.”
He has predicted that, “on the path that the CIS is going”, in two or three surveys the PSOE will have an “absolute majority”, since, “the more sentences are lowered for sexual offenders, the bigger a corruption scandal is or the more they rise taxes, the more Sánchez rises in the polls ”.
He has also criticized Sánchez for “trying to get votes in Venezuela by making express nationalizations, with a free bus included”, and has demanded that he explain “who paid for the buses and the act in Caracas” which means “rudely mixing the party and the Government”.