“Sánchez is the worst president of Spain at the worst possible moment”

  • Bendodo, number three of the Conservatives, claims that the President of the Government saves on “marketing”

The general coordinator of the PP, Elijah Bendodohas assured this Saturday that Pedro Sanchez it is the “worst president” of Spain at the “worst possible moment” and has pointed out that the balance is “24 tax increases and 39 ministers”. At a press conference in Ceuta, where he chaired an extraordinary Executive Committee of the Ceuta PP, Bendodo argued that the Prime Minister “His legs are shaking and he can’t walk the streets of Spain”.

“Recently a photo was taken in Bosnia because they don’t know him there because in Spain he has it really complicated”, after which he asked him to save energy “but in giving in to the permanent blackmail of the independentistas, that they will always want more”. For the number three of the PP, Sánchez must save “in marketing in the face of an economic crisis that has been made flesh with the worst July in the last twenty years and we are already in the abyss of recession”.

Likewise, he has asked the President of the Government “to stop moving the chair in the Public Prosecutor’s Office or the State Attorney’s Office and fattening up the administration, since even the political planning office is too much even for Pedro Sánchez, who has set up his pharaoh’s court with 22 ministers and 800 advisersa court that costs us 89 million euros a year”.

The balance

Elías Bendodo has said that the balance of Pedro Sánchez in the Government “is 24 tax increases and 39 ministers and a very complicated situation, and the last thing has been the Iberian pact that has been the Iberian scam.” In relation to the Iberian pact he has argued that Spain “is so supportive that we finance gas to France at a rate of 6 million euros a dayfor what we think is the Iberian scam”, in addition to pointing out that the energy saving plan “is not serious”.

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He stressed that the PP has presented five State pacts on matters such as new taxation, justice or a new energy model and has lamented the “ideological prejudices of socialism and the podemites” to address these popular claims.

On the other hand, he has called on the Government to “become more involved” with Ceuta, “which it must look at more carefully and attend to as it should, because Spain needs a strong Ceuta and it should not only be on the agenda when there is a problem because Ceuta is much more and must be part of the day-to-day action of the Government”.

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