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Regenerative project vs. personal resistance

Regenerative project vs. personal resistance

While Feijóo calls on Spaniards to work toward an inclusive project, the PSOE leader puts his personal survival first.

The end of the failed coalition government experiment. After the disastrous performance of the PSOE and Sumar (and previously Podemos), the president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, reelected to his party's Congress, aspires to govern alone and have a free hand to carry out the regenerative project that, in his opinion, Spain needs after the seven-year period in which Pedro Sánchez has submitted to the dictates of radicals, populists, separatists, and pro-ETA supporters to remain in power.

The exact opposite of what the Popular Party (PP) proposes, for whom it is urgent to restore the neutrality of institutions, reestablish educational standards, strengthen judicial independence, restore equality among Spaniards, regain control of immigration, and put an end to the voracious tax-collecting of the Treasury. In short, "to end the Sánchez nightmare."

A major task in which Feijóo hopes to cooperate with other parties, excluding only Bildu and Sánchez's PSOE, through parliamentary alliances to tear down the wall erected by Sánchez at his investiture in November 2023. The enthusiasm generated by Feijóo in the ranks of his party, more united than ever since leaving the government in 2018, contrasts sharply with the resignation of the Socialists in the face of Sánchez's entrenched power. During the Federal Executive to elect the replacement for the imprisoned Santos Cerdán, he was only able to urge his followers to "resist" in the face of the scandals that increasingly affect more people in his family and political circle.

While Feijóo calls on Spaniards to work toward an inclusive project, the PSOE leader puts his personal survival first.

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