Ana Rosa Quintana's harsh speech against Catalonia: "They want to make Spanish disappear"

Ana Rosa Quintana is a presenter who is not shy when it comes to establishing her opinion on her program, on El programa de Ana Rosa, which has been broadcast every morning on Telecinco for almost two decades.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
13 April 2023 Thursday 04:50
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Ana Rosa Quintana's harsh speech against Catalonia: "They want to make Spanish disappear"

Ana Rosa Quintana is a presenter who is not shy when it comes to establishing her opinion on her program, on El programa de Ana Rosa, which has been broadcast every morning on Telecinco for almost two decades. A time in which she has seen how the social and political chronicle has evolved, and for this reason she wanted to express her impression on a subject of importance.

Specifically, especially the debate that arose around the parody on TV3 in the program Está Passant in which a particular Virgin of El Rocío questioned Holy Week and the Virgin herself. And the presenter of the Telecinco format has not been cut.

So much so that this week the morning space of the leading Mediaset chain once again put this inter-community confrontation on the table. Specifically, the news that dealt with the issue of the "instructor who pressured the colleagues in an interrogation to deny the Andalusian nurse."

A performance before which Ana Rosa asked: "This man does it in what capacity?" A question to which a collaborator soon pointed out: "It would be good if you understood Catalan if you work in Catalonia."

At that point, another of those present at the debate table questioned that “he has been expelled from Catalonia for reprisals. An institutional, sadistic and mafia retaliation”. And not only that. Another insisted: "Catalan is beginning to be a language of imposition." Precisely for this reason Ana Rosa Quintana pointed out for her part that "what cannot be is that if there is a person who is in Catalonia... the language of Spain is also Spanish".

Immediately afterwards, a collaborator pointed out: "People who work in the Catalan, Galician or Basque administration, it is normal that they have knowledge of the official language of their community." But she, serious, sentenced: "No sir, the problem is that they want to make Spanish disappear."