• 'Other policies' Yolanda Díaz outlines a "country project" to "stretch" the PSOE supported by other leftist leaders

  • Yolanda Díaz accelerates her separation from Podemos with Ukraine before presenting her new political project

After a few difficult weeks as a result of the Sahara crisis and the alleged espionage of secessionism by public bodies, and already facing the Andalusian pre-campaign, the coalition government found an

oasis

this Sunday in the celebration

of May 1

.

Up to nine ministers took to the streets in different cities of the country to commemorate

International Labor Day

, boast of the milestones achieved by the coalition in socioeconomic matters and commit to seeking solutions to the rise in prices and the impact of the war on our economy .

However, it was the Minister of Labor, Yolanda Díaz, who captured all eyes.

The second vice-president of the Government coincided in the great march called in

Madrid

with the union leaders of our country and celebrated the step taken with the labor reform.

And she announced that the next milestone to conquer is the reform

of the Workers' Statute

to "change from top to bottom" their working conditions.

Other colleagues from the Council of Ministers, such as Alberto Garzón or Pilar Alegría, also participated in said march, but the Minister of Labor showed her maximum harmony with the leader of

Más Madrid

, Mónica García, with whom she walked embracing during a section of the route.

Crucial moment

In this way, supported by the unions and with nods to part of the formations to the left of the PSOE, Yolanda Díaz continues to pave the way for the launch of her political project with which to transcend United We Can and present herself as a candidate for the next general elections.

The moment, in fact, is crucial: after postponing the listening process prior to the formation of his candidacy due to the war, Díaz keeps the deadlines and details of his project in limbo a few days before learning how the left in Andalusia will be organized , where it has not yet specified what its degree of participation in the campaign will be or if the alliance agreed upon there will be the embryo of the broad front that the Minister of Labor and her entourage are designing.

In any case, the image of complicity between Díaz and García is a continuation of what was seen in November in Valencia during the

Other policies

act .

That meeting, in which Díaz, García,

Mónica Oltra

,

Ada Colau

and

Fátima Hamed

participated, was the beginning of a plan that on two occasions -first for the labor reform;

later because of the war - has had to be postponed by the vice president.

And, as in that conclave, Podemos has remained distant.

The purple

delegation

at the Madrid demonstration was made up of the Minister of Social Rights and leader of Podemos, Ione Belarra, who was accompanied by other positions from the party leadership, with whom Díaz did not show the same proximity as with the leader of Más Madrid , at a time when the discrepancies between the vice president and the

purple

ministers as a result of the invasion -due to the shipment of weapons- or the

Pegasus case

-Díaz asks to investigate before requesting the resignation of Margarita Robles- are at the order of the day.

The focus, in Andalusia

For her part, the Minister of Equality, Irene Montero, participated in a meeting with the militancy in Malaga as part of May 1.

Other ministers, taking advantage of the Andalusian pre-electoral period, moved to the south, such as the head of the Treasury,

María Jesús Montero

, who participated in the demonstration in

Seville

.

Not far from there, in

Cádiz

, Vox celebrated its particular march on May 1, in which both

Santiago Abascal

and

Macarena Olona

participated , who will be the regional candidate on June 19.

The Minister of Industry,

Reyes Maroto

, for her part, attended the celebration in

Valladolid

, and the Minister of Science,

Diana Morant

, did the same in the event in

Valencia

.

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  • Yolanda Diaz

  • Irene Montero

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  • United We Can

  • Monica Garcia