More politics and less comedy

Pedro Sánchez has done it again.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
30 April 2024 Tuesday 05:02
8 Reads
More politics and less comedy

Pedro Sánchez has done it again. I don't know if calculating a game of chess in the five days that he has been confined in Moncloa or resorting to a poker stroke on Monday at the break of dawn. He has decided to continue, with more force if possible, and the theatricality of the operation has confused those who wanted him out and those who implored him to stay and thus maintain their positions.

It is a crack that displaces the staff overcoming real or fictitious adversities. It combines, following the subtleties of The Prince of Machiavelli, strength and cunning, fortune and audacity. He doesn't care about being loved or feared, what he wants is to wield power using the tools at his disposal. And so far, he has succeeded even if it is at the cost of governing against approximately half of Spaniards, whom he places in the darkness of the right and the extreme right. Without an agreement with the other Spain on a few main issues, I predict more upheavals in the stage that begins after the long and unprecedented stoppage in April.

Sánchez's adversaries are not only in the opposition but in the judiciary and the media. The Spanish Government maintains that what is disturbing is not that the judges are doing their job, but that they are seeking the support of the media to bring down the political class. You have to be naive not to have noticed this practice so common in many liberal democracies. He himself has experience in dealing with judges and journalists, those who listen to him and those who criticize him fairly or unfairly.

The point and part announced by Sánchez does not consist only of speeches against the "world reactionary movement" but of future laws that are approved with the requirements established by the Constitution and that protect the conflicting interests of citizens in any modern society. There is an old principle in political science that states that the most delicate moment for governments is when they begin to reform. we are here

If you change the rules of the game of the judiciary without the established consensus you will make a mistake. And if he wants to silence the press, no matter how hostile, rowdy and miserable it is, he will dig a deeper hole in the confrontation between the two Spains. In any case, a solvent and solid democracy consists of a tough opposition, an independent judiciary and a critical and free press. I heard it from Joe Biden at last Friday's dinner with accredited correspondents in Washington, a show full of humor and subtle but venomous jabs at the White House host. A little irony, please.

A warning to surfers regarding the reorientation of the media, mainly digital media, which are becoming factories of emotions without promoting analysis based on facts. Legendary journalist Walter Cronkite was voted the man who inspired the most confidence in Americans half a century ago. The general public trusted his comments.

Sánchez says that freedom of expression should not be confused with freedom of defamation and that it is necessary to demonstrate to the world how democracy and freedom are defended. very agree But first you need to aspire to something simpler, which is to win the trust of the largest number of citizens who simply aspire to be governed with responsibility and common sense. Without doing comedy.