Getafe, May 13 (EFE) , of “prejudice and envy” and of “populisms and ideologies that want to impoverish”.
On the second day of the campaign, Feijóo went to the Madrid town of Getafe, where he participated in a rally with the Madrid president and candidate for re-election, and the PP candidate for mayor of this town, Antonio José Mesa.
Feijóo has asked for the vote for a “solid, broad, clear, forceful, incontestable, free and absolute” majority when Ayuso is at stake to stop depending on Vox, which in its last two years has externally conditioned its policies and has blocked regional budgets .
Without mentioning Santiago Abascal’s party, Feijóo has stressed that the Popular Party is out to win and has defended that on May 28 the Spaniards must choose between “solid governments and weak governments.”
“We have to choose governments and the Spain that we want in the coming years. We have to choose whether the model is to continue with weak presidents and radical minorities hostage or to go back to having free presidents, who resign and appoint their government and who approve laws through the majority of the ballot boxes that constitute the majority parliamentary groups in the Congress and the Senate”, he exclaimed.
He has also joked with the CIS poll, which foresees a possible absolute majority for Ayuso, to which he has said that if that is what the “CIS de Tezanos” gives him, it is that he is going “to get off the map of Madrid”.
In Getafe, a city in the south of the region governed by the PSOE for 40 years, Feijóo has said that it saddens him to hear that a city is red or blue because “citizens belong to nobody” and has warned that those who give for made a city they end up losing it.
In addition, he has once again called for “repealing sanchismo”, its forms and its “pernicious policies” and “unforgivable errors” such as the law of only yes is yes, while at the same time he has vindicated the alternative of the PP and has set the Ayuso’s fiscal policy.
The leader of the PP also calls for solving the problems that in his opinion Sánchez does not see “from the Falcon” such as poverty, unemployment, inflation or the price of the electricity bill.