El anteriormente ultraconservador The Times publica un artículo titulado "The unstoppable rise of Yolanda Díaz"

tHE dOG

Himbersor
Desde
5 Ago 2021
Mensajes
3.417
Reputación
4.995
¿Qué interés tiene el NWO y sus perros ingleses supuestamente conservadores en difundir el bulo de que Yolanda Díaz y el comunismo crecen imparables en España?

Noticia además destacada y en primera plana. Públican noticias sobre España a lo bestia como si fuera una extensión suya.

Y todo lo que dicen es para jorobarnos, siempre mentiras, como lo que acaban de publicar sobre el racismo o su apoyo a los separatistas o guarros siempre.

¿Qué pretenden con esta trolaza del ascenso imparable de la bruja comunista?


Spain elections: the unstoppable rise of Yolanda Díaz

The deputy prime minister is the country’s most highly rated politician but others on the far left view her as a traitor

A gifted negotiator propelled by her progressive political mantras, Yolanda Díaz was largely unknown three years ago
A gifted negotiator propelled by her progressive political mantras, Yolanda Díaz was largely unknown three years ago

JESUS MERIDA/SOPA IMAGES/REX antiestéticaTURES
Isambard Wilkinson, Madrid
Friday May 26 2023, 12.20pm BST, The Times

The rapturous applause that greets Yolanda Díaz on the election campaign trail before Sunday’s elections in Spain stands in stark contrast to the stiff smiles accorded her by fellow far-left politicians.

Díaz, 52, a deputy prime minister and a communist, is hailed by her supporters — and herself — as the future first female prime minister of Spain. But although she is the country’s most highly rated politician, according to polls, her popularity does not extend to the leadership of the far-left Podemos party that elevated her to power. They view her as a traitor who has betrayed them and divided the left by launching her own political movement, Unite, last year, which has had the opposite effect as its name suggests.

A gifted negotiator propelled by her perennial smile, steely ambition and progressive political mantras, Díaz, who was largely unknown three years ago, holds in her hands the fate of Spain’s government, a curious position for someone who is not even running in the elections.

With Spanish media obsessing over her fashion sense — which she “could have learnt from Queen Letizia”, El Mundo newspaper said — she has become the darling of the left. The daughter of a communist leader who was jailed under Franco in Galicia, the northwest region where both she and the dictator were born, she is a labour lawyer who sleeps fewer than four hours a night. She fondly recalls Spain’s famed communist leader Santiago Carillo kissing her hand as a child, and announced her ambitions last month, shortly after launching her movement. “Today I’m taking a step forward. I want to lead our country,” she told a political rally in Madrid.

The head of Spain’s Socialist-led coalition government, Pedro Sánchez, the prime minister, desperately needs such a leader by his side. He will be nervously watching Podemos’s results in Sunday’s hotly contested elections, which are viewed as a crucial indicator for a general election due to be held in December, and will be contested in municipalities across Spain and in 12 of its 17 regions.

In a battle that polls suggest will be neck and neck between the left bloc and that of the conservative main opposition Popular Party and the hard-right Vox party, Podemos is facing significant losses. Díaz stands to prosper in such a scenario, potentially forcing Podemos into a junior role in an alliance with Unite. Polls suggest that in December Díaz’s less radical movement would win 27 seats in Spain’s 350-seat parliament, but Podemos, which has 35 seats, is predicted to drop to 11.

Although Díaz’s movement is not running in Sunday’s poll she is picking and choosing far-left candidates to lend them her support in return for their backing in the general election. This week in Valencia, a knife-edge bellwether region where Podemos may struggle to meet the threshold to win any seats, she exhorted its voters to “democratically destroy” the opposition. If Podemos fails in Valencia, so do the Socialists, opening the door to a conservative victory nationally.

“The Popular Party is ahead in the polls and so I would say that it is very probable that they will become the first party in terms of votes in the regional and local elections,” said Pablo Simón, a professor of politics at Madrid’s Carlos III University. “But the point is how many regional and local governments they can win and it’s not clear because everything depends on a very narrow margin of votes and on the potential coalitions that the Socialists can make with Podemos and the Popular Party with Vox.”

The critical political space to the left of Sánchez’s Socialists was beset by infighting soon after Podemos’s founder Pablo Iglesias left politics in May 2021 after his party suffered a drubbing in a regional election in Madrid, the last in a series of disappointing poll results. He nominated Díaz to take over his post as deputy prime minister even though she was not a member of his party, but when her ambitions became clear the two fell out.

Their acrimony broke out in public over the botched Podemos-led consent law, whose deficiencies led to the shortening of sentences or freeing of more than 1,000 sex offenders. Díaz’s failure to support Podemos over the fiasco incensed Iglesias, who remains as an éminence grise of the party. He said that Díaz was “puffing her profile” and dubbed her actions as “not only perversos and cowardly, but also stupid”. He also said, in his role as a broadcaster-activist, that he “perhaps made a mistake” by anointing her his successor.

Her rise has highlighted the prime minister’s failure to convert his relative economic successes into more votes
Her rise has highlighted the prime minister’s failure to convert his relative economic successes into more votes

The conflict is threatening to tear apart the left, with no agreement in sight on a joint ticket between Díaz and Iglesias’s party. Polls suggest that the right benefits from the schism.

Díaz’s popularity rests in part on her responsibility for a labour reform that is credited with a dramatic fall in the number of temporary job contracts, although commentators have observed that the reform recategorised them, thereby removing them from unemployment figures. As labour minister she also oversaw a generous furlough scheme at the height of the pandemic.

Her rise has highlighted Sánchez’s failure to convert his relative economic successes into more votes, with many left-wing voters lukewarm about the prime minister.

Simón noted that the economy had been overshadowed in the election campaign due to controversies such as the Socialist’s alliance with Basque Country Unite, the former political wing of the now-defunct terrorist group Eta. “The situation is quite strange due to a combination of high prices [due to inflation] and high unemployment,” he added, “which is another factor why the economy has not played a major role.”

Critics of the left would argue that the government has reduced unemployment rather than achieved high employment as, with a rate of 12.87 per cent in the last quarter of 2022, Spain is one of the countries with the highest unemployment rates in the European Union.

This will not deter Diaz’s beaming smile, a smile that Iglesias and his coterie would argue does not preclude her from being a villain.
 
Última edición:
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Ahora su gabinete de prensa usará esa.entrevista pagada en el dossier que se va entregando a los periodistas para presentar a la tucán. No es que quieran informar a los ingleses, es.marketing. una noticia en el times viste como un conjunto de Prada de esos que le gustan a Yoli.
Ahh ok, es propaganda electoral en España para que los gente de izquierdas vean que es muy valorada por el prestigioso The Times y la voten.

OK got it.
 
Volver