The PP rummages in the division of the Government after the bankruptcy by the law of yes is yes

The PSOE wants to turn the page on the yes is yes law after its reform in Congress with the popular votes and the vote against its partners in the Government and legislature, but the PP is going to try not to do so.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
21 April 2023 Friday 03:26
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The PP rummages in the division of the Government after the bankruptcy by the law of yes is yes

The PSOE wants to turn the page on the yes is yes law after its reform in Congress with the popular votes and the vote against its partners in the Government and legislature, but the PP is going to try not to do so. The decibel level that the debate within the Government has acquired due to this modification of Irene Montero's star law is ammunition for the PP, which believes that after what happened on Thursday in Congress, and after the accusation against the PSOE of that he has been "humiliated", Pedro Sánchez should dismiss him as minister, but he will not do so because "he does not have authority".

Faced with this panorama, it is not difficult for the PP to delve into the existing division within the Executive headed by Sánchez, and the conclusion that the popular ones draw is that a situation like this "cannot be governed", because the President of the Government must to spend more time watching what happens in his cabinet, than to "solve the problems of the Spaniards",

A situation that erodes the PSOE, and for this reason various leaders of the PP came out this Friday with the same message: "The Government is in decomposition" and has become, said the general secretary of the PP, Cuca Gamarra, in Albacete, "into a problem that generates an unbreathable environment".

The number two of the PP considers that the situation experienced in Congress on Thursday is already serious, but that Pedro Sánchez did not go to the approval of the reform promoted by the PSOE, shows his "lack of courage" that makes him "hide in Doñana and after the CIS surveys", so as not to face the situation he had in his Government with several ministers and even a vice president voting the opposite of the rest of the ministers.

"But his absence is not going to erase the fact that he is largely responsible for what happened," Cuca Gamarra stressed, and that the reform "agreed on with the PP despite the insults and disqualifications" directed at them "is not a errata ", as the PSOE wants to show, but rather an authentic "repeal", he said, of the reform of the Criminal Code that the law of yes is yes, although it took six months to do so, when to reform the Criminal Code in what regarding sedition or the reduction of penalties for embezzlement, Sánchez fixed one thing in 39 days and another in 11, because his partners requested it.

For the general secretary of the PP, Sánchez has not carried out this reform, which was a social outcry for having listened to those who asked for it, but "because of the surveys", which showed him the erosion that the law was causing in the PSOE. And for this reason, minimizing the reform now so as not to completely break with its partners is for the popular leader "a lack of respect for women", because the reform "is not a misprint".

Cuca Gamarra recalled some of the phrases and even insults that the members of the Government have addressed to each other, with Yolanda Díaz "calling the president of her Government a macho", with a vice president, again Yolanda Díaz, "asking for the resignation of the Minister of the Interior, while the minister says to say it to his face" and that same vice-president "saying that Morocco is a dictatorship, while the Foreign Minister says nothing".

Gamarra has also seen "a minister - Irene Montero - saying that the PP has humiliated the party of the president of her Government" and a vice president "saying that she will not vote for the party that made her deputy and vice president." "That is to say, a lack of government and an unbreathable atmosphere" from which it is necessary to get out with the elections.

Together with Cuca Gamarra, Esteban González Pons, delved into this same division of the Government when analyzing the political situation. The Deputy Secretary for Institutional Policy stressed on TVE that "we do not have a coalition government, but rather an association of personal interests so as not to lose the chair." And given the situation created "in any serious democratic country, for much less than what is happening in the Sánchez Executive, a government crisis would occur."