• Monarchy. Businessmen warn of the effect of the attacks on the King: "destabilizing the Crown undermines investment in Spain"

  • Politics: The Government of Pedro Sánchez pushes the relationship with the Crown to the limit

The Prime Minister slips away.

The matter is uncomfortable and Pedro Sánchez has preferred to slip away.

Neither reproach his second vice president Pablo Iglesias nor his Minister of Consumption, Alberto Garzón, for their attacks on the Crown, nor acceptance that part of his Government has opened a frontal campaign against the Head of State.

All this is, in his opinion, "fictitious threats" raised by the PP to undermine and wear out the Executive.

This has been the reaction of the president when the leader of the first opposition party has openly accused him of allowing the attacks on the King "symbol of the unity and permanence of the nation" and in the name of whom "Justice is administered" and pretending Furthermore, "through the back door, subvert the constitutional order."

To this Pablo Casado has added the reproach of giving the green light to the independentistas so that they promote the "democratic breakdown" and even being willing to "pardon the coup leaders."

With these arguments, the leader of the PP has demanded that Sánchez "cease his radical government and agree with other partners."

His, he said, "is constitutional desertion, it degenerates the institutions and ruins the Spanish by a handful of votes."

Pedro Sánchez has called Casado's intervention provocative but has gotten away from the bottom of the question.

The president has assured that Casado's accusations are "fictitious threats" and has affirmed that his Government "protects the Spanish" by expanding the ERTE, asking that the blockade of constitutional bodies be abandoned, approving a minimum living wage and betting on the ecological and digital transition.

"We protect the present and the future of the Spanish," he stressed.

"However, you make up fictitious threats and set yourself up as a defender of the Crown. Be careful because they set themselves up as defenders of the unity of Spain against the independence movement and you see how we end up. Don't go down that road. I offer unity, "Sánchez replied.

Pablo Iglesias, for his part, maintains that what the PP does is "vindicate the monarchy of the last 500 years" and reproaches the popular for not believing that "the foundation of sovereign power is

Parliament

."

"You do a lot of damage to the parliamentary monarchy because you use it as a shield and identify it with the ideas of the right. You are taking years of its life."

And he has added a "Republican recommendation": "Don't take our jobs away."

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

Know more

  • Congress of Deputies

  • Pablo Iglesias

  • Alberto Garzon

  • Pedro Sanchez

  • Philip VI

  • Pablo Casado

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