In the Madrid Assembly two leaderships would be resolved on Wednesday, that of the Presidency, which was clear that it would fall on the side of Isabel Díaz Ayuso , and that of the opposition, much more uncertain, but that Íñigo Errejón had the intention to challenge him Angel Gabilondo . A leadership, this second, perhaps ephemeral, because the former socialist minister has a foot and a half outside the Vallecas hemicycle and the leader of More Madrid crosses his fingers so that Pedro Sánchez is not invested president, let's go to the electoral repetition and can end of evicting Pablo Iglesias by exporting to Congress the political formation that was invented with Manuela Carmena while making empanadillas. Each day that passes, Errejón is less convincing when he says there will be no more Spain. "They tell me on the street," he has come to verbalize this week on a radio station.

Errejón is so accelerated, that he has stopped braking with Díaz Ayuso. With a condescending, dismissive tone, doubting the intellectual capacity and preparation of the elected president of Madrid, Deputy Errejón said much more about himself than the new Madrid leader . What would have happened on the More Madrid bench if a popular deputy had treated a leader of that formation with that disdain? Surely, social networks would have burned. Errejón, surely one of the most prepared and intellectually solid deputies of the Madrid parliament, spared no disqualifications: "I am afraid of a president who has no capacity to hold a 15-minute debate."

It was a rough exchange that, contrary to what should be the goal of Errejón, gave the best minutes of Díaz Ayuso, who forgot to read, improvised and improved significantly compared to the previous day. Admittedly, Ayuso had provoked him by reminding him of his black scholarship or his ties to Chavismo - "He has stained hands of dictatorship," he said in his reply, but his tone left the path cleared to Gabilondo, who in his usual slow but incisive tone he claimed himself in the afternoon as the true leader of the opposition. Whatever is in Vallecas. "We will banish personal interperlations from the Assembly, avoid passing moments of embarrassment, claim parliamentary courtesy," he quarreled those present.

The rifirrafe between Díaz Ayuso and Errejón was the most intense moment of a debate in which PP and Cs assumed the last Vox document. "It contains perfectly acceptable measures by the new Government," said Ignacio Aguado who never went so far. The one who will be vice president of Díaz Ayuso, who dedicated exactly half of his speech to talk about Venezuela, got the square of the circle: not to name even once to which it will be from Monday its president. Of course, he had started the day changing his seat to make it difficult for photographers to immortalize him next to Rocío Monasterio , an image he could not avoid in the end.

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