It's not the economy, stupid!

There are things that are difficult to predict, especially the future, but I will eat the census card I found in the mailbox today if in September one of the two major Spanish parties has not changed its leadership.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
04 July 2023 Tuesday 04:46
6 Reads
It's not the economy, stupid!

There are things that are difficult to predict, especially the future, but I will eat the census card I found in the mailbox today if in September one of the two major Spanish parties has not changed its leadership.

And I will devour, in addition, that of the neighbor, if in the winning PP, according to the demographic auguries, Aznar allows Feijóo to consolidate his power in the party; because it was imposed by the territorial barons, fearful of the power of Madrid de l'Ayuso, which had just scuttled the innocent of Casado and was heading straight for Moncloa. He is now under guardianship.

Together with the replica president, Aznar has crunched Ciudadans and will now swallow Vox doing what he knows how to do: Vox, but with more grace and salt than the angry Vox.

In the end, I will bite off an entire PSOE poster if, also in September, Pedro Sánchez is not better than his party. Sánchez knows English; and neither Ayuso nor Feijóo nor Rajoy nor Aznar nor his lady's lattes knew about it (Zapatero, neither did he ally civilizations). And Sánchez also loves to exhibit it overseas, where he believes it is called to great universal destinies.

And one wonders why, since he reads newspapers, he sees presidents taking flight at international summits and dying at home. Aznar was only happy smoking cigars in Texas, and Felipe, anywhere but Madrid. Here, let me insert a peripheral wedge and suggest as a spare, after the take-off of Sánchez in the universe, the good man of the Island, among all the associated managers the best, as he has shown in the last elections

I started writing with the CIS data saying that PP voters declared that their personal economy had improved, but that Spain's had worsened. That is why I know that when they are back in Moncloa, they will say, no matter what happens, that the Spanish economy is doing as well as ever.

But for the vast majority, the economy doesn't count when voting, I'm afraid, unless their flat has doubled in price without them having to work to get it. And that won't happen with interest rates going up so... It's not the economy, stupid!