ABC’s revelations regarding confidential information about Alberto González Amador, partner of the president of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, have revolutionized the press conferences that political parties usually hold on Monday at the start of the week and after meetings of their steering committees. .
In Bambú Street in Madrid, national headquarters of Vox, the protagonist of the demonstration, José Antonio Fúster, also reacted to the news of the day by combining his two functions within the party: spokesperson for the Political Action Committee and president of Vox Madrid.
As such, he showed his perplexity at the information which reveals that the leader of the Madrid socialists, Juan Lobato, would have received from the Moncloa palace the confidential document on González Amador. More precisely, the one who was chief of staff of Óscar López, then chief of staff of the president of the government.
Fúster made it clear that Vox does not share the policy of Isabel Díaz Ayuso at the head of the Community of Madrid, her determination to “disguise herself as Vox” without actually implementing her policies. But he assured that it would never occur to them to resort to methods such as those he denounced and used by the government of Pedro Sánchez.
“We are against Ayuso’s policies but we will never do anything that would encourage personal destruction using vile and shameful methods and perverting Spanish institutions,” he rejected the practices he learned about through on ABC news.
In any case, the Vox spokesperson believes that this action is nothing other than a reflection of “what the PSOE, the Sánchez government and also the Socialist Party of Madrid are. » They are like the scorpion and the frog. The nature of the PSOE is to use institutions for its own benefit. »
Furthermore, he pointed out that the same thesis is corroborated by the report of the Central Operational Unit (UCO) of the Civil Guard, which notes a “preeminent participation of the Attorney General of the State”, Álvaro García Ortiz, in the leak denounced by Alberto González Amador.
“This is how destructive socialism works,” Fúster emphasized, explaining that the Executive “attacks all institutions” with the aim of “using the levers of power against political adversaries.”
This is what Vox recalled in the two motions of censure against Pedro Sánchez who led the last legislature. “There are others who did not want to see it,” he said, criticizing the Popular Party, which he criticized for not being totally opposed to the government and for continuing to sign agreements with the socialists, such as the election of Teresa Ribera as vice-president of the European Commission.
In the same sense, he questioned the idea launched last week by the leader of the popular parties, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, to lead an alternative if one of Sánchez’s partners was willing to change his mind. “For our information, this was only proposed to the parties that support Pedro Sánchez,” he said, demonstrating that there was no contact between the two parties.
In this sense, he recalled that Vox launched many initiatives to form a front against Sánchez, such as a letter that Santiago Abascal sent to Feijóo and of which the PP “did not even acknowledge receipt.” “The PP, if it really wants to build a real opposition alternative, should abandon certain policies of agreement on everything and agreement on everything,” he explained.
Insisting on Teresa Ribera, he regretted that the Spanish PP “did not succeed” in convincing its allies in Europe that he could not be elected, contrary to what he assured that Vox had done, which “has succeeded” in convincing its partners the Patriots group voted against, including the party of Hungarian Víktor Orbán who was running for a position in the Commission.
For example, he gave Sánchez’s appearance this Monday at the Moncloa Palace to formalize his replacement as Vice-President of Ecological Transition by Sara Aagesen. “Of course, Teresa Ribera leaves a mark,” denounced Fúster. Hundreds of deaths in Valencia, such is the imprint.