Spain finds itself in an extreme situation. The climate of putrefaction is unbearable. An end of the cycle. A twilight government strewn with corruption. A government retrenched after scandals. A government surrounded by numerous cases. A government suffocated by corruption. A government in decay. A rotten government. A government on fire. A quagmire. Spain does not deserve a corrupt government. Sanchismo and corruption are exactly the same thing. Sánchez is hiding on the international agenda amid new scandals. People are just waiting for Sánchez to resign, surrounded by his family’s corruption. For less money, a president resigns in any other European country. What else must happen for this government to fall…
I wrote down every sentence in the first paragraph over the past two days, the sentences I heard and read in political statements and newspaper covers. And that’s not even mentioning the rallies and opinion columns, because I’m sure there are many more. Is the message clear? I don’t know, maybe you didn’t understand it, so let Núñez Feijóo tell you, this Tuesday on a friendly radio: “We are facing a rotten government. We have never had a serving president of government so surrounded by corruption. Never. Never in the history of our country. Now, have you caught it? Are you starting to feel something? This is what it is, an exercise in political synesthesia: talking a lot about corruption until it gets under our noses, until it makes the atmosphere stink.