Carlos Alsina's applauded monologue today: "The PSOE's fuses have blown."
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A shock effect on the airwaves: Carlos Alsina opened Más de uno by attacking the crisis rocking the PSOE and focusing on the party's internal corrosion following the latest scandals.
The journalist, with his usual irony, commented, in relation to the appearance regarding the blackout in Spain, that it is the Socialist Party whose "fuses have blown."
In front of the microphone, the journalist painted a portrait in which "the koldos, the leires, and the cerdanes" became symbols of a PSOE incapable of activating firewalls. "What mechanisms are we talking about if none of them have been breached for eight years in a row?" he asked sarcastically.
In the middle of his story, Alsina cited The Times article—"The Party's Over"—which describes Pedro Sánchez's administration as opaque. The foreign press, he noted, is already describing Spain as a country that "deserves a better government."
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Carlos Alsina also ironically commented on Pedro Sánchez's defensive strategy in the face of the scandals: "The president, now resigned to repeating himself as the magician who has run out of tricks, wrote another of his letters yesterday. To the party members, of course, who never fail him ." At this point, the host underscored the weariness of a segment of the electorate, who perceive these letters as attempts at victimhood rather than political responsibility.
Furthermore, Alsina harshly criticized the lack of internal control within the PSOE in recent years: "When a corruption scheme has lasted eight years, with one leg in the ministry and the other in Ferraz, it becomes impossible to maintain that control mechanisms existed ."
El Confidencial