Adolfo Suárez resigned as president of the Government. Alfonso Guerra resigned as vice president. Joaquín Almunia and Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba resigned as general secretaries of the PSOE due to electoral defeats, as did Albert Rivera and Pablo Iglesias. The thing about the popular Cristina Cifuentes was very different because she did not resign but rather was resigned from the PP after half of Spain saw her steal two creams in a supermarket and the other half debated her fake master’s degree. Pablo Casado was also different, in that the man never wanted to leave, but they forced him to do so, after standing before the microphones of the bishops’ station to denounce the suspicious enrichment of Isabel Díaz Ayuso’s brother with the collection of commissions during the pandemic.
No, resign was never a Russian verb, as they defended in the 15M to express social fatigue due to the lack of custom in Spain when it comes to assuming political responsibilities. It is a conjugated term on many occasions. And it is, above all, an act of responsibility that some assume in person and others, only when they feel the pressure of public opinion or are pushed to do so by their political organizations. Íñigo Errejón is a clear example of the latter, although he did it late, badly and leaving an irreparable wound in the feminist discourse of the alternative left.
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