Madrid (EFE).- The leader of Sumar and second vice president of the Government, Yolanda Díaz, has gone to vote appealing to all citizens to exercise a right that has been difficult to recover and issuing a warning “”today we play to get up tomorrow with more rights, more democracy and more freedom”.
Díaz, accompanied by her daughter Carmela, has voted at the polling station installed in the Escuela de Minas around 12:45 p.m., where inside some voters have made some critical comments against the vice president, including a few allusions to whether she had brought the iron or to go iron it, referring to a video in which Díaz appeared ironing clothes.
In statements to the media after depositing Sumar’s ballot in the ballot box, he asked to reflect on the fact that “the vote has not fallen from heaven”, insisting that there is a lot at stake in these elections: “for the people of our generation, these are surely the most important elections, we are at stake for the next decade”.
When leaving the school, located in the Chamberí district, one of the PP strongholds in the capital, the Minister of Labor left to some applause and shouts of “president, president”, including a PSOE representative who received her calling her “beautiful, beautiful”.
But boos have also been heard, they have branded him a “communist”, urging him to go vote in Vallecas and the occasional comb has also been seen when Díaz was walking towards the Ministry of Labor.
Inside the college, two voters have been dialectically engaged on account of the house in which, according to one of them, the minister lives, who has said that it had cost him a million euros, while the other has replied that he lives in the ministry, as it is.
The vice president thanked the members of the board and the security forces for their work so that everyone can vote.
The entry Yolanda Díaz warns: Spain is at stake to get up tomorrow “with more rights and more democracy” was first published in EFE Noticias.