The scorched earth policy practiced by Pedro Sánchez since he decided to link the PSOE to the radical left and independentistas of all stripes threatens to undermine the constitutional foundations of our country.

The Spanish is a strong democracy that, over more than four decades of history, has demonstrated its strength in the face of challenges such as 23-F or the independentist riot of 1-O.

The current situation is as serious or more serious to the extent that it is the government of the nation itself that agrees to cheat with those who aspire to liquidate national unity

.

The declared objective of Sánchez's coalition and investiture partners is to overthrow both the parliamentary monarchy and the territorial model, keys to the vault of the architecture on which the democracy illuminated in 1978 pivots.

The pardon to the prisoners of the

procés

, which the Minister of Justice will begin to process as of next week, is more than a shameful cession to the independentistas.

This is an extraordinarily serious attack on the rule of law.

It would nullify the conviction for sedition issued by the Supreme Court and would not serve to appease the threat of unilateralism of secessionism.

Sánchez himself affirmed before the start of the legislature that the pardons "were not on the table."

His word, at this point, is worthless

.

Now he assumes this position at the request of Iglesias and adds a shameful legislative reform to lower the criminal offense of rebellion and sedition.

Everything to the taste of the separatists and, in this way, pave their support for the public accounts on which the political survival of Sánchez himself depends.

Negotiating impunity in exchange for budgets constitutes a disgrace and another example of the cynicism of a president who demonstrates operating without scruples.

Sánchez fled yesterday to a canceled summit in Brussels on the day that Spain officially entered recession, Calvo met with the political heirs of ETA to beg for their support and the King is vetoed by the Government in Catalonia.

The cancellation of the announced presence of Felipe VI in Barcelona in the delivery of dispatches to the new judges - the CGPJ sent invitations to the act with the Monarch as authority - is another embarrassing cession of PSOE and Podemos to separatism.

Since Sánchez is president, La Moncloa has diluted the presence of the Head of State in Catalonia, which represents an unacceptable anomaly

.

To this is added the witch hunt that Dolores Delgado has begun to perpetrate in the Public Ministry as a result of the unpresentable statements of Luis Navajas, the prosecutor who exonerates the Government of criminal responsibilities in the management of the pandemic.

After the Supreme Prosecutor's lieutenant accused his colleagues Consuelo Madrigal and Fidel Cadena of pressure -a fact as serious as it was unusual-, the Tax Inspection processed a complaint against Madrigal through the platform published in EL MUNDO on May 4 in which he questioned the legal framework of the imposition of the state of alarm.

Faced with the irresponsibility of Navajas, whose statements damage the credibility of the institutions, it should be noted that Madrigal is a prosecutor with recognized independence

and an impeccable track record.

A few months of legislature have been enough for the Spaniards to wonder what will remain of the Spain of 78 after the sanchismo.

It is unworthy to assault the institutions of all to carry out the Budgets.

Not everything goes to cling to power.

Sánchez's plan was always the

Frankenstein coalition

, hand in hand with the populists and secessionism: his roadmap involves repudiating the outstretched hand of Ciudadanos and then blaming the Arrimadas formation for continuing to be tied to the photo of Colón.

Neither PP nor Cs can transact anything with an insolvent and reckless government that despises the constitutional framework.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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