The PP against the periphery

Wilt Chamberlain continues to maintain, 62 years later, the mark never beaten in the history of basketball: 100 points in a single game.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
18 February 2024 Sunday 04:06
8 Reads
The PP against the periphery

Wilt Chamberlain continues to maintain, 62 years later, the mark never beaten in the history of basketball: 100 points in a single game. The Warriors beat the New York Knicks 167-147. Manuel Fraga Iribarne will continue to maintain the electoral advantage in some autonomous regions in Galicia with 43 seats and 52 percent of the votes. And the PP has 9 absolute majorities out of 11.

The PP will govern in Galicia as they wanted from Madrid DF, so the good ones have won: what did these Galicians want if they already had the AVE two years ago, if before the closest thing to the high speed they had enjoyed was the parade of little Nicolás by Ribadeo?

The PP emerges victorious as the PSOE is soundly defeated, but it would be wrong to point to the amnesty pacts and the perfidious pro-independence parties as the cause of the socialist tragedy. Many socialist votes have been diverted towards the BNG, which has publicly defended the PSOE's negotiations with Junts and has also attacked "with the issues that really interest the people", a phrase coined by Madame Camarga Sánchez Camacho.

The real Galician drama has the main stage on the left. The PSOE's blow joins the troubling disaster of Yolanda Díaz with Sumar behind Vox and that of Podemos, which got fewer votes than Pacma.

Núñez Feijóo breathed hard last night and can stand up. Díaz Ayuso has to wait despite the usual media breakfasts (this morning, another one). Madrid will leave Núñez Feijóo alone, whom Pablo Casado once said was the best president Galicia has ever had (bypassing Manuel Fraga). But go find out if Casado advanced a premonition.

Chamberlain, Fraga, Feijóo, but let the PP and PSOE trees allow us to see the forest: Núñez Feijóo can smile, Pedro Sanchez can whistle looking the other way, but the news in Galicia is that a Spain continues to grow strongly different, young and multilingual who raise their voices asking for less Madrid and more periphery.