Cuca Gamarra screwed up a lot. Lot. Five minutes after her boss suspected at the door of Congress that bad news was coming, while her colleague Carlos Mazón tried to contact the families of those who died in Valencia, the PP spokesperson made a preamble about the catastrophe in her first intervention of the control session to the Government and immediately threw himself at the neck of Vice President Montero with a question from our everyday mud: “What is going to be the next institution that they are going to colonize?” Montero asked him for sensitivity on such a black day for the country. And Gamarra continued doing his thing until someone in the PP calibrated the slip and ordered Miguel Tellado to put things in order. Feijóo corrected the error in the face of the vice president’s insistent call for harmony. At that time of the morning we were at forty dead. And Montero seemed sorry: “Today is not the day, Mrs. Gamarra, today we do the citizens a favor if we show unity among all political parties.” The PP backed down and requested the suspension of the session. And the socialist Patxi López accepted the proposal, appealing to the humanity of their honors. But it was all a lie. Another lie. The most obscene possible. Because President Armengol decided to maintain the rest of the parliamentary activity, in which coincidentally the decree to expel the opposition from the RTVE council was voted on. Montero and López transformed themselves into great statesmen at the head of a Government sensitive to the victims of the meteorological disaster to suspend the control session in which they were going to be asked about the new accusation of Begoña, the latest revelations of the Ábalos case and the order from the Supreme Court to the UCO to register the attorney general’s office. But he immediately returned to the routine of lying to vote for the new directors of Broncano’s public television. One was delighted with Gamarra’s impiety, whose discomfort was clearly appreciated, and comforted with Montero’s delicacy. And then impudence changed the result. The PP had made a mistake, but the PSOE was plotting monumental evil. Did the Government use the DANA calamity in the Valencian Community and Castilla-La Mancha to obtain political benefit? The doubt is chilling. It could not be true that a vice president was pouting during the Government control session and then stayed to vote on the expulsion of her political rivals from RTVE. With its actions, the Executive had responded to Gamarra’s unfortunate question: “What is going to be the next institution that they are going to colonize?” The saddened socialist deputies and many of their associates were committing unprecedented infamy: they filled Congress with mud while the heroes of the EMU tried to remove it from the victims’ homes. He knew that Sanchismo was mendacious, deceitful and amoral, but not heartless. Simulating humanity is a disgrace. Excuse the retching.
#Alberto #García #Reyes #mud #DANA