Feijóo calls for rallies throughout Spain at the same time on the 12th at 12 against the amnesty

The president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, announced this Monday rallies in all the squares of all the capitals of Spain at the same time for Sunday the 12th at 12 against the amnesty.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
05 November 2023 Sunday 15:22
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Feijóo calls for rallies throughout Spain at the same time on the 12th at 12 against the amnesty

The president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, announced this Monday rallies in all the squares of all the capitals of Spain at the same time for Sunday the 12th at 12 against the amnesty. One more protest in which the PP will be called by various civil society organizations against the grace measure prepared by the PSOE partners.

These concentrations were announced by Feijóo in his speech before the national board of directors of the PP, the highest body of the party between congresses, called to plan the steps to follow in response to Sánchez's agreements with the independentists, and where the popular president made it clear that, despite to the pressures and threats due to their rallies, the last one in Valencia on Sunday, "we are going to continue, they are not going to silence us, they are not going to silence us, and they are not going to stop us."

The leader of the PP insisted on this fight: "No matter how much they intimidate us, we are going to continue working, in the street, in the town halls, in the town councils, in the autonomous communities, where we govern and where we are the opposition, so that the PSOE is portray, in the Senate with our absolute majority, in Congress as the majority party", and all to say "no to Sánchez's investiture and yes to the equality of the Spanish people". The PP will do it, he said, "with all the resources and before all instances."

And Alberto Núñez Feijóo considers that the PP is "Spain's constitutional refuge against those who are renouncing their dignity." The constitutional refuge against "the greatest attack on the rule of law, on the equality of Spaniards and on the institutions." The president of the PP stayed there, because the president of Aragón, Jorge Azcón, went further: "In the history of democracy in Spain we had never suffered an attack like the one we are suffering today. I think it is true that there was There were more attacks on democracy, there were on 23F, there were on October 1, 17. The big difference is that now it is the Socialist Party that is supporting the independence partners so that these attacks on our democracy are consumed.

Feijóo rebelled "against the attempt to divide us into two blocks that do not exist in society," and that is why he believes that the time has come to "be united" and, above all, he said, "to defend our Catalan compatriots, who "They are being used by the independentists and the Government as shields for their outrages."

Excesses with clear intentions, for Feijóo, "the attempt to empty the state" by the independentists, and "get the necessary votes for the investiture by the others," he said before the more than 500 PP officials gathered. at the headquarters of Génova 13, because he believes that the secessionists are wanting to "collect the toll of Spain's humiliation", and this is what the PP is not going to consent to.

Of course, Alberto Núñez Feijóo asked that "the independentistas not be confused with Catalonia", because "neither the independentistas can speak on behalf of all of Catalonia", nor Pedro Sánchez "can speak on behalf of all Spaniards". The president of the PP warned that "Catalonia is much more than the independentists", the same as "Spain is much more than Pedro Sánchez." Hence he asks the PP "not to fall into the trap."

The popular leader addressed the Catalans directly to tell them that "they will not be alone", because "the PP will be there to give them a voice" and assured them that "they will not be able to erase Spain from Catalonia, no matter how much they agree", because "there is the PP, and we are not going to let them take us out of Catalonia."

Feijóo, who insisted that with the concessions to the independentists "we are experiencing the greatest democratic setback in our history," stressed that he will fight so that "Spain does not decide behind closed doors between two parties, just as Spain does not decide in accordance with the interests of a person", which is why he insisted on his demand that the Spaniards be allowed to speak out "so that what was not voted on on July 23 can be voted on, and the Spaniards can say whether or not they agree with what was agreed behind the backs of the Spanish, after a big lie".

However, for the first time, the president of the PP was convinced that "there will be no elections" on January 14, the date on which we would have to go to the polls again if no one wins the investiture before November 27. "There will be no elections because they would go to the opposition," he said, since they know that the Spanish have already realized what is happening and they know that they have lied, that it has gotten out of hand."

In Feijóo's opinion, the Spanish are already aware that what we are dealing with is "independence impunity and that the rest of the Spaniards finance it", which does not surprise anyone, he stressed, "because it is what have always asked", but "what is serious" on this occasion, he stressed, "what is shameful is that a president, based on money from those who demand impunity, pays for it with the dignity of the Spanish people."

For the popular leader, "Sánchez has humiliated himself, he has humiliated his party and he wants to humiliate the state", amnesty "those who threw bricks at the police." For this reason, he said, "for Spain and for them, we will not consent to asking for forgiveness from those who attacked and attacked the institutions of the State." Because in his opinion with this "the discourse is being assumed that Spain behaved like a dictatorship" and that "there was a dirty judicial war" and if that is consecrated "those who declared independence will leave with honors, while judges are prosecuted for complying the law". Of course, he was convinced that "history will judge them, and sooner rather than later, Spaniards will do so by voting again."