The PP called Cristina Álvarez Rodríguez, a Moncloa councilor who worked for Begoña Gomez before the Senate commission of inquiry on November 26.
According to the Popular Party, Cristina Álvarez Rodríguez “contacted the vice-rector of Complutense to collect data relating to the software that Begoña Gómez would have registered in her name although it was owned by the University, and also wrote to the sponsors of the chair to ask them to continue funding it.
“No matter how hard the Sánchez government tried to cover up this matter, the whole truth of the plot and its ramifications will come to light, both through judicial investigations and through journalistic investigations and the Senate Commission,” assured the PP after announcing these statements.
In addition, the PP also summoned the former president of the Canary Islands and current Minister of Territorial Policy, Angel Victor Torres; to the Minister of Transport and Mobility, Oscar Puente; to the vice president Maria Jesus Montero; and the former CEO of Globalia, Javier Hidalgo.
On November 28 and 29, the three ministers will testify in the Senate. Thus, according to the PP, Ángel Víctor Torres “must explain why he lied to the Congressional Commission of Inquiry by claiming that he never spoke with Koldo and other members of the corrupt plot, an assertion that has been denied by the UCO”.
For his part, Óscar Puente will be asked “why he kept Jesús Manuel Gómez and Michaux Miranda in the ministry for a whole month after their accusation.” In her case, María Jesús Montero must explain “why the authors of the report that revealed the Koldo affair, the rescue of Air Europa, were fired, and what happened to VAT on Covid contracts: a question that ‘she couldn’t resolve. answer his ‘number 2’ today.”
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