Pedro Sánchez has attacked this Saturday harshly against the Popular Party, which he has accused of “arrogance”, “arrogance” and “denialism” and which he has reproached for “failing to comply with the Constitution” and not being “neither a patriot nor a Europeanist”. With these words he referred, at a rally in the city of Úbeda, to the main opposition party and main rival of the PSOE in the next municipal and regional elections of 28-M and, later, in the general ones at the end of the year .

During his speech, the President of the Government and Secretary General of the Socialists waved all his electoral flags: the march of the economy, the future Housing Law and his commitment to climate change, now focused on the controversy surrounding the irrigation systems that surround the park. from Donana.

He has emphasized that, despite all the crises, with his government “Spain creates jobs like never before, it has the cheapest energy in Europe and the labor market and pensions have been reformed with social peace.” “The key”, he has assured, “is not to respond to the crises that come, but to do it in another way”.

Sánchez has been convinced of having “broken the taboo” by demonstrating that he has managed the economy “better than the PP” by having managed to “make expansive policies and also balance the accounts.” In short, having implemented a completely different policy from those who “talked about the economic miracle and ended up in jail.”

As a result of this reflection, he has denied the description of “patriots”, “constitutionalists” and “Europeans” to the popular ones, whom, in addition, he has accused of being “arrogant” and being contaminated by “Vox denialism” by the plans that the Junta de Andalucía defends for the area around Doñana. “In this outrage”, he has said, “neither science, nor the European Commission, nor the irrigators, nor Unesco support them.” And he has sentenced: “The PP does not have the right to take on a treasure that is a World Heritage Site and is one of the main buffers against climate change.”

To this, the President of the Government has added his commitment “up to the bars” with a policy that fights against the demographic challenge and in favor of the ecological transition. To promote the first of these objectives, he has advocated “making a homeland by distributing the institutions throughout the territory and not locating them all in Madrid.” “The State”, he has defended, “must get closer to the citizens by having a physical presence there where they are”.

The socialist leader has once again reviewed the advances that he considers to be the most important in the legislature and has indicated the future Housing Law as the next decisive step in the transformation of the country, which, he has repeated, “will convert what is today a problem into a right”, although he has admitted that this cannot be achieved “neither in one day, nor in two, nor in three.

At the end of his speech, he was convinced that with his programmatic offer the Spaniards will bet on the PSOE again on March 28 because “the future always gives progress a reason.”

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