“Congratulations to Feijóo, the winner, and to Sánchez, the loser of the elections.” This is how Ana Rosa Quintana began her program this Monday, July 24, the day after the general elections that gave a adjusted victory for the PP (136 seats). The PSOE achieved 122 deputies, although it has many more options to govern through an alliance with Sumar and the pro-independence parties.
The surprise was very important, because all the polls published before the elections gave the PP a comfortable victory with an absolute majority thanks to a pact with Vox. However, the sum of the two parties on the right does not give. For this reason, the reaction of Ana Rosa Quintana, Pedro Sánchez’s ‘scourge’ in recent years, was highly anticipated.
“There is an unprecedented paradox: for the first time, the losing party, the PSOE, could govern with 122 seats, if it gets the necessary support. The question is: at what price?” Quintana asked, acknowledging that the result is a “personal success” for Pedro Sánchez. Of course, the presenter was struck by the way of celebrating her result. “Never had a loser come out to celebrate a defeat.”
Also read: Ana Rosa is clear that Feijóo is going to win and wants to interview him after 23J: Sánchez has not been invited
“Feijóo is not given the numbers and Sánchez would have the accounts if he reissues the expanded Frankenstein government with Puigdemont,” he continued in an analysis in which he also spoke of the rest of the sovereignist parties. “Rufian already warned: the price was going to be more expensive,” Ana Rosa pointed out in her editorial on Telecinco.
Ana Rosa: “Yolanda was fourth and said she had won”
Ana Rosa Quintana, who This Tuesday he will close his morning program after 19 years to jump into the Mediaset afternoons in autumn, it has also had for Yolanda Díaz, fourth force with Sumar (31) after Vox (33). “Yolanda, who was fourth, said that she had won. We are facing a new term: the victorious victory.”
Finally, and in view of the difficult governability, Ana Rosa has made an appeal to the grand coalition: “PP and PSOE add up to 258 deputies. Is it so difficult to reach an agreement between them? It is no longer about the list with the most votes governing, it is about not living divided into blocs. Let’s agree without vetoes between the two big parties”.