Yolanda Díaz highlights her “commitment against machismo” after Errejón’s resignation and the PP speaks of “hypocrisy”

The Vice President of the Government and Minister of Labor, Yolanda Díaz, has defended that Sumar’s commitment against machismo is “firm and without exceptions” after the resignation of the party’s spokesperson in Congress, Íñigo Errejón, became known this afternoon. following accusations of sexist behavior against the founder of Podemos and Más País.

Díaz has spoken out on the social network In addition, he details that a process was initiated to gather information about these testimonies spread on networks and that, as a result, today he has left all his positions.

From their coalition partner, the Socialist Party, they affirm that they are “very concerned” about all the information in this regard, and assure that “the PSOE will always be with the victims of sexist violence and in favor of a feminist policy that acts harshly against those who exercise it.”

The Minister of Equality, Ana Redondo, spoke in this regard this Thursday, trusting that Sumar “will clarify the facts with total agility and transparency” because “it is what citizens demand.” “I know that they have started an in-depth investigation,” the minister assured, and then recalled that “machismo does not understand social classes, professionals, or situations” since “it is structural.” “I trust that this internal investigation will reach the end,” he added.

The Minister of Science, Innovation and Universities and general secretary of the Valencian socialists, Diana Morant, has also been asked about it, who said she was “a little shocked” after learning of the accusations and has acknowledged that “it is not news that “I would have liked to read.” Morant has assured that gender violence “does not understand ideologies or social strata” and has defended that “as in almost everything, whoever does it must pay.”

Other ministers from the other part of the government coalition, such as Sira Rego or Ernest Urtasun, have also spoken out about the resignation. The person in charge of Culture has defended that coherence “between what we do and what we say” is “required” in a message on the social network X. For her part, the Minister of Youth and Children has expressed her solidarity with those women who They have suffered “abuse and violence” and he has defended in this same social network that “the left” are also “deeply permeated by patriarchal structures” and by “the sexist omertá.”

For her part, the national deputy secretary of Mobilization and Digital Challenge of the PP, Noelia Núñez, has made public her “rejection” at the reasons for Errejón’s resignation, which she has described as “an open secret” on the left. “I knew it. They covered it up. “They consented to it,” the Madrid deputy said this Thursday, adding: “This is the hypocritical feminism of this government of Pedro Sánchez with Ábalos and now of Mrs. Yolanda Díaz with Errejón.”

The popular ones claim to understand women who are “defrauded” with this type of politics and that “it seems that if the aggressor is from the left everything is covered up, because the only thing that matters is power.” Furthermore, Núñez criticizes the use of mental health to “cover up” this type of aggression.

The leader of the PP of Catalonia, Alejandro Fernández, has also spoken out on the case, calling the resignation of Íñigo Errejón, accused of sexist treatment of women, a “purge” typical of “Stalinism”. “Errejón’s explanations are creepy. They are so reminiscent of the processes of purging, humiliation and self-blame of Stalinism that they warn us that this ideology is still more alive than ever,” he wrote. in your X account (formerly Twitter).

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