Juanma Lamet Madrid

Madrid

Updated Monday, February 12, 2024-10:14

  • Elections in Galicia Genoa's slip with the "pardon" puts PSOE and Vox in the electoral campaign and puts the PP on alert: "It's a bad time"

  • Cluster bomb analysis in the middle of the campaign: no one can rule out a reversal

The PP is experiencing days of tension due to the hypothetical pardon with "conditions" of Carles Puigdemont that the party leadership has proposed. Alberto Núñez Feijóo is trying to put out the fire six days before the Galician elections, and he has the help of Isabel Díaz Ayuso, who came out this Monday to help him.

For the president of the

Community of Madrid

, there is no controversy, because Feijóo has said "the same thing" as always: that he would not approve a pardon because none of the conditions are met. "I have not heard anyone from the PP say anything different," she stressed in an interview on

Telecinco

's

La Mirada Crítica

. And she has insisted that Feijóo "has not talked about a pardon" in public.

It was at a lunch with journalists where sources from the PP leadership pointed out the possibility of pardoning the Junts leader if he repents and admits to being tried. In that same meeting, from Genoa they stated that they find it difficult for Puigdemont to be convicted of terrorism, and they admitted that the PP studied the amnesty for "24 hours", to conclude that it is unconstitutional.

This has unleashed great internal tension, and some perplexity in some of the main baronies. Privately, there is a majority of criticism for what they consider to be a mistake in the middle of the Galician campaign. For Ayuso, however, it is rather a case of exaggeration by the PP's political rivals.

"Vox and the PSOE always go hand in hand in these circumstances," he said in the same interview on Telecinco, before criticizing that it is a remote-controlled operation from "Moncloa." "There's a lot going on to see if this way we're all in the same boat," he summarized.

Of course, there is something that Ayuso has put his foot on, and that is his party's contacts with the independence movement. "It's unforgivable. I wouldn't go with Junts even around the corner," because, as the PSOE said before, it is "the xenophobic and racist rightist," he stressed. "I wouldn't go anywhere," he insisted once again.

Ayuso has insisted on criticizing the Government for being, in his opinion, the one who is heating up this controversy from the engine room of Moncloa. "He is a shell player," he said of Sánchez, and "he messes with us" so that people don't see who depends on Junts. "And the one who has given in is you," he told the president directly.

Barbate and the Goyas

"We must without a doubt toughen all penalties against drug trafficking" and give the "maximum guarantees" to the Civil Guard because "ours depend on their safety."

Ayuso has described what is seen in the videos as "horrible" and "shameful" and has complained that at the Goya awards "not a word of solidarity" was said with the Civil Guards killed at the hands of drug traffickers.

"And neither does Pedro Sánchez," he said, before celebrating that Feijóo is going to Barbate "to represent us all."

Finally, Ayuso has ironically raised her chest about being called a "facha", ensuring that they do it because of the good data from Madrid.