While the students of the Complutense University camp to demand an end to the killing of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli army, sparks fly in the regional Assembly this Thursday due to the mobilizations. Because when Manuela Bergerot, the leader of Más Madrid, celebrates that young people are organizing “against Netanyahu’s genocide” and reproaches Isabel Díaz Ayuso for her Government having demanded that the rectors “take politics out of the classrooms”, the president does not responds by denying the major, neither opting for diplomacy, nor denouncing Hamas terrorism to also ask that the Israeli army cease its attacks. No. Ayuso takes up another criticism from Bergerot, who finds it ugly that the PP has asked the electoral board to remove two banners that commemorate the elderly who died in nursing homes during the pandemic, and challenges her to hang banners in the universities in memory of the Israeli women murdered by terrorists. As if Más Madrid had not condemned the Hamas attacks, which it has done emphatically.
“When you talk about us, remember the Jewish women murdered, mutilated, dismantled by Hamas, to whom you make a big mess,” Ayuso tells Bergerot, spokesperson for a party that had to send a burofax to Telemadrid so that public television rectify a tweet in which he claimed that the group had not condemned the attacks of October 7.
“They dismembered them, inserted objects into their sexual organs, displayed them as trophies and spat on them…,” describes the regional president, who has distinguished herself for her absolute support for Israel. And she asks: “Are they going to put up the tarps in the Spanish public universities in favor of the Jewish women, the Israeli women who were treated like this? No, right? Incoherence is what it has.”
It is not a heated debate, because there is nothing improvised in the public interventions of the first swords of politics. And Ayuso, who describes it as “Nazi style” that Podemos hung a banner with the face of his brother to remember the commission he had received thanks to a contract with the Community, is in that category. In case there were any doubts, in any case, the parliamentary spokesperson of the PP, Carlos Díaz-Pache, shortly returns to the issue, with arguments similar to those of the president.
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This says to the left: “That false feminism of when a woman is raped, the first thing they look at is her nationality or her religion to see if she is Israeli or Jewish… anti-Semitism wins over this false sorority.” That point is reached after a surprisingly placid morning in the Assembly, where the politicians take it calmly for once and do not raise the tone.
Rocío Monasterio (Vox) makes an intervention full of criticism of the PP that Ayuso uses as usual to send the message that her former partner is aligned with the left against her. Juan Lobato (PSOE) asks for solutions for the young people of the region, who have so many problems in emancipating themselves and finding work, and criticizes the president – “she neither manages nor governs,” he says – but Díaz Ayuso barely enters the fray. That is reserved for Bergerot, who uses a stronger tone than the rest, of a rally, hyperbolic at times, so vitaminized that the conservative leader cannot avoid entering into the melee.
“The president proclaims freedom from the rooftops, but she is the censor in chief,” Bergerot begins regarding the tarpaulins about deaths in the residences, which the PP has asked to remove at the Electoral Board. “Censorship is not an anecdote of her mandate, but her modus operandi,” he continues, to launch a string of examples. “The Assembly Table [donde el PP tiene mayoría] He has censored the appearance of the associations of the families of the residences, of the experts from the truth commission, and our questions on this topic. They also vetoed our questions about the Quirón group,” she adds, referring to the main client of the president’s partner, reported by the Prosecutor’s Office for the alleged commission of two crimes of tax fraud and one of falsification of a commercial document.
The thing is not there. Bergerot has more things to say as the temperature rises in the chamber, the PP deputies gesticulating, those from Más Madrid burst into applause. “You are an enemy of freedom, and you do not miss the opportunity to demonstrate it,” Bergerot continues. “That’s why he called the rectors to tell them to take politics out of the classrooms,” he says. “You won’t be able to erase what bothers you,” he warns. “You dream of a society in which nothing complains and everyone applauds you while you review the troops,” he continues. And he finishes: “But I have bad news for you: they didn’t vote for us to be here quietly.”
“We are not going to remain silent in the face of genocide, unlike you,” María Pastor, also from Más Madrid, later insists in that same message. But Ayuso is not silent either, of course. Although he does leave the plenary session immediately after finishing his last response. While the plenary session continues, this time discussing issues specific to the Community of Madrid, the regional president is no longer even in the building.
You will visit the Specialized Day Care Center for patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) at the Enfermera Isabel Zendal public Hospital. An agenda that summarizes political priorities: once the Assembly stage has been exploited, the president heads to one of her favorite showcases, the Zendal, for which she seeks content and meaning after investing more than 150 million in its construction and being left with almost no money. activity with the end of the pandemic.
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