• Politics Olona is surrounded by critics of the Vox leadership after the break with Abascal but rules out creating a party

  • Crisis in the party Vox ends the relationship with Olona: "It is definitely the end of the road"

His voice today, more than ever, was the most anticipated.

Macarena Olona, ​​24 hours after receiving the loud slam of Vox, has charged hard against the leadership of the party commanded by Santiago Abascal, whom she has even accused of taking advantage of her illness to try to end her political career.

"Today I see how some are sorry that I do not have cancer", has come to express the former leader of Vox in

Andalusia

, whose presence in

Murcia

, where he has participated in a forum at the University, has generated significant tension not only in the city center: "This is only the beginning of the road, it will be the Spaniards who decide when I go home. I continue on the path that I aspired to travel with Vox", he launched in the direction of the party apparatus, and in clear reference to the expression with which Iván Espinosa de los Monteros rejected his reinstatement ("It is definitely the end of the road").

With high expectations for Olona's first public appearance after learning of her political divorce with Vox, anti-system groups have met a couple of hours before her arrival near the

University of Murcia

(UMU), where they have tried to boycott the act of the former leader of Vox when considering that her figure embodies "hate, racist, classist and anti-LGTB speeches" that have no place in a public space for study, identically to what happened a week ago in Granada.

"Olona, ​​coward, the UMU is on fire";

"the struggle and the classrooms are also ours";

"university police out";

"homophobes out", "the uni is our house, let's sweep the fascists";

"Fascist state, terrorist state" or "Murcia will be the tomb of fascism" were some of the proclamations launched during the arrival of the former party leader at the Paraninfo of the University of Murcia, located in the central

Campus de la Merced

.

A strong police device, of about a dozen National Police vehicles, has prevented the protesters from blocking the entrance to the university space, as happened last week in Granada.

However, there have been moments of tension when there has been a face-to-face meeting between several followers of Olona and the self-proclaimed anti-fascists, as well as when the State attorney has arrived in the center of the city.

In front of them, dozens of Olona supporters and Vox sympathizers have shown their support for the former party leader, who is giving a conference this Friday organized by the critical sector with the party leadership in the Region of Murcia.

A gesture with which she once again challenges the Vox apparatus, although Olona herself has remarked through social networks that, after her total break with Santiago Abascal, she is not considering the creation of a new brand: "There is no space today for a new political party. It would only serve to further fragment the political chessboard."

With party cadres and members still in shock over this "painful" outcome, Olona has once again had to face an escrache directly encouraged by formations like Podemos.

This Thursday,

Javier Sánchez Serna

, the party's national co-spokesperson and deputy for Murcia, urged the protesters to gather for a new escrache, as happened a week ago in Granada: "We are not going to give space to your hate speech in the university public. They told him in Granada and they will tell him again in Murcia", he asserted from the speakers' gallery.

mutual accusations

Just a week ago, Olona suffered an escrache at the

Faculty of Law

in Granada.

Hundreds of critics blocked the entrance to the room where the conference was scheduled.

Finally, the former Vox candidate in Andalusia managed to enter after being escorted by the National Police and confronting the anti-system groups.

Outside, several hundred other Olona supporters cried out for "freedom" and supported the state attorney.

There were clashes, shouts and discussions between both sides.

What happened then was widely condemned by right-wing groups, who lamented that Olona's right to freedom of expression was not guaranteed.

Even from Vox, his former leader was supported.

After the tension experienced in Granada, Olona publicly challenged Santiago Abascal and called for a meeting to study the possibility of "walking together" again.

An option that just a week later has vanished: the accusations launched in an interview granted to

Abc

in which he denounced the "lack of internal democracy" and the "lynching" organized by the party leadership were sufficient reasons for Vox to rule out any possible understanding option.

"This is definitely the end of the road," announced Iván Espinosa de los Monteros, the party's spokesman in Congress.

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