• Congress.Unidas Podemos appeals to the businesses of Juan Carlos I and 'saves' Pablo Iglesias from explaining the 'Dina case' in the midst of the electoral crisis
  • Justicia.'Caso Dina ': "There are leaks but they want us to think it's a robbery"
  • Courts. Dina's statement that sank Iglesias before the judge: "Did he destroy the card so that you would not continue sending screenshots?" "We should ask her"

The Popular Party is not willing to let the legal muddle of the Dina case pass by. An issue that fully affects the second vice president of the Government, Pablo Iglesias, and that the two government parties - PSOE and Unidas Podemos - are trying to dilute at all costs and as soon as possible, because they already threaten to flood the government's own land and affect the president Pedro Sánchez.

Despite the fact that the Congress, with the socialist and purple votes , rejects the appearance of Churches to give explanations about this matter, the PP senators do not resign themselves and ask for accounts from the government's number three . Iglesias, however, far from clearing up the mess on the phone card of his former adviser, Dina Bouselham, prefers to remain absolutely silent and defends himself by attacking the popular and challenging them to go to court if they understand that there is any indication of crime in his performance.

The popular senator María Salom , under the cover of a question about the objectives of the 2030 Agenda, has blamed Iglesias this Tuesday for her salary of 8,000 euros per month, her "casoplon" in Galapagar and her attitude of "alpha male of the herd "that" makes decisions on behalf of its collaborators "and allows itself to retain the phone card of its former adviser" violating their right to privacy "and returning it later, after months," destroyed ".

For Salom, this way of acting is "cowardly, macho and disloyal" and is only an "example of gender violence". "You have become," Iglesias has blurted out, "a recalcitrant sexist and you should apologize for so many lies and then apply your own medicine and resign."

The defense of Iglesias

Iglesias, once again, has slipped away insisting on the theory that his party has deployed to defend him and that is to ensure that there is no Dina case , but " Villarejo case , orchestrated by the PP to protect itself from corruption" that nests in its rows.

The vice president has challenged the popular to go to court if he really has evidence against him. And it is that, according to Iglesias, if the Popular Party and Podemos had been investigated, "many popular would be in jail."

Senator Javier Maroto has also insisted on the matter, alluding to the "threats" and the "signaling" of journalists by Iglesias, including from the Council of Ministers' table, "making himself the victim and naturalizing the insult and attack" against the informants who criticize him and uncover his allegedly shady affairs.

An attitude that, according to the PP senator, "does not fit democracy." "This is not Maduro's Venezuela and Spain does not have a democracy as weak as you would like," he has reproached him.

Iglesias points to Sáenz de Santamaría

Pablo Iglesias, determined to shake off the accusations and flee from any accountability, has directed the shot at the former Vice President of the Government, Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría, whom he has openly blamed for having maneuvered to "end the employment of journalists that were uncomfortable for him. "

The vice president now ensures that he does not like the insults and has put himself and his father as recipients of them, thus referring to the episode in which the PP parliamentary spokeswoman, Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo, reproached him for being the son of a terrorist. Iglesias has also wanted to deepen his alleged victim status again, asking for "decency" from the popular and insisting that "no one" like him has been the object of criticism and insults in this country.

The Minister of Justice, Juan Carlos Campo, has also been involved in this controversy when he has been urged to assess the performance of the Prosecutor's Office in the Dina case . Campo, taking advantage of the independence of the Public Ministry, has assured that he has "no opinion" in this regard. An explanation that does not convince the PP at all.

The popular believe that in the Dina case "everything sucks" and is nothing more than a matter organized by Iglesias himself to avoid responsibilities by presenting himself as a victim with the help of a "patriotic prosecutor", whose visible head would be the closely linked prosecutor Ignacio Stampa allegedly to Podemos's lawyer, Marta Flor . "The Dina case ," the popular ones have warned , "will end up being pure dynamite to blow up the government."

Irene Montero, in her capacity as Minister of Equality, has also been questioned about whether it is "acceptable" for someone like the second vice president to retain the cell phone card of a former collaborator "without her consent or knowledge" supposedly to "protect" her . Montero, in defense of Iglesias, has thrown balls out, stressing that the 'Dina case' is not a matter that affects the powers of the Government.

For the popular senator, Sofía Acedo, it is, however, one more "regrettable" episode, if possible because the Minister of Equality and the vice president's partner "supports the machista attitudes of Iglesias from an empty and ideological feminism."

Montero, as Churches himself did before, has started the fan, reproaching the popular people for their attitude during the pandemic and the lack of support for the measures approved by the Government to face the health and economic crisis derived from it. The minister has also accused the PP of "wanting to turn the legislative power into a sewer" and has recalled, once again, the conclusions of the parliamentary investigation commission on the patriotic police activated during the times of the Mariano Rajoy government. Montero has urged the PP to "ask for forgiveness" and "get to work."

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Know more

  • PP
  • Pablo Iglesias
  • We can
  • Juan Carlos Campo
  • United We Can
  • Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría
  • Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo
  • PSOE
  • Javier Maroto
  • Spain
  • Senate
  • Dina Bousselham
  • José Manuel Villarejo
  • Irene Montero
  • Mariano Rajoy
  • Galapagar

PoliticsThe PP requires Iglesias to explain the destruction of the SIM card of his adviser: "He has managed to muddy everything around him"

SpainThe 'Dina case' causes the return of Pablo Iglesias 'unchained'

PodemosPablo Iglesias reacts furiously to the news of the 'Dina case' and says he will call journalists to testify to Congress

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