The PP of Andalusia demands that Sánchez, out of respect for the citizens, explain his pacts with the separatists and clarify whether there will be an investiture or elections.
•The general secretary of the Popular Party of Andalusia regrets the “permanent contempt” of Sánchez and his allies towards the Spanish, “as we saw again yesterday in the Senate, a constitutional forum to which the Government does not even attend.”
• Demands “respect for Andalusians”, while warning that “Andalusia cannot have its opportunities limited because of separatist nonsense.”
The general secretary of the PP of Andalusia, Antonio Repullo, has demanded this Friday from Córdoba Pedro Sánchez to "stop messing around and clarify once and for all what he is going to do." “Sánchez must now say at what price he will run for office or if we will have new elections in January.”
Repullo recalled that next Monday, October 23, marks three months since the general elections “which Sánchez brought forward less than 24 hours after having lost the municipal and regional elections, with the justification that the Spaniards would clarify which government they want. for Spain".
Today, almost five months after having dissolved the Cortes and hastily called "an election that he also lost" - he noted -, leaving the country "in the limbo of a government in office and with a bad agreement, Sánchez still has not explained to them to the Spaniards what their government plan is,” said the general secretary of the Andalusian Popular Party. A time during which the Spaniards have rebelled in the streets against Sánchez's contradictions, to the point that he "can't even step on them."
In his opinion, "what we do know is that Sánchez is willing to give in to everything that the independentists demand of him and more specifically to the impositions of a fugitive from Justice like Puigdemont, who has the key to keeping Pedro Sánchez in office." power, something I had always denied.” A position that “they do not understand even from their own party.”
According to Repullo, “Sánchez and his allies despise the Spanish.” “We saw it again yesterday in the Senate,” he says, “a constitutional forum to which the Government does not even attend,” but the fact that the Catalan president did appear to make it clear that “they are not going to stop and that the amnesty is the beginning of a road map that has the referendum marked as its destination.
On the contrary, he valued the intervention of the Andalusian president, Juanma Moreno, who clearly defended that “Catalonia is everyone's business” and that “all citizens of this country must have the same rights and obligations.” Just as the Andalusian leader did yesterday in the Senate, Antonio Repullo has claimed that "Andalusians deserve respect", warning that "Andalusia is a crucial part of Spain that cannot have its opportunities limited, and even less so by separatist nonsense."
Repullo has described as “alarming” the lack of transparency of the PSOE and the Sánchez government not only with respect to the negotiations for his investiture, but also the “hiddenness” of the economic data that the communities need to prepare their respective budgets, thus making it difficult the work of autonomous governments.
Given this, he highlighted that "Andalusia does have a sensible, effective Government, which works always seeking dialogue and consensus to meet the needs of its citizens." And it does so by preparing budgets that, with all caution in the face of the lack of information from the Government, “will once again be accounts focused on what is important, on what matters to people: on social policies (health, education and dependency), in employment, especially for young people, in eliminating the wage gap between men and women and expanding the possibilities for conciliation.” Some accounts, moreover, very especially focused on the problem of drought.
However, Repullo has reiterated that "to consolidate these actions, we need a government that acts with equality and respect for all Spaniards, with a fair budget distribution." But he regrets that "we have the opposite, a PSOE government that has defrauded its voters with impositions not included in its electoral program" and that has made "lies and changes of opinion its hallmark."
“From the Popular Party of Andalusia we ask Sánchez to stop lying and tell us if he will form a government with those who want to take away our rights or if he will call elections,” he concluded.