Yolanda Díaz sings the ‘Spain White Shirt’ of the hope of the left but calls Pablo Iglesias grumpy

Yolanda Diaz He fired this Sunday on La Sexta against all his rivals and postulated himself as the great white hope of a Cainite left that is killing itself, as has historically happened. He destroyed fellow government members like Marlaska, whom he accused of skipping Human Rights, and also other progressive ideologues such as Pablo Iglesias, whom he almost dismissed as a grumpy dwarf. This Snow White from the Spanish political tale used with Jordi Évole a language sometimes so elemental and didactic that it seemed aimed at kindergartens but within that tone of the ‘once upon a time’ type she did not leave a puppet with a head: yes, dressed as a white princess, emissary of honesty and purity.

For now, Yolanda Díaz joins the total white, true trend of this dry spring that highlights the water war in our country. A few days after turning 52, Sumar’s candidate for the general elections, unleashed the war of the left, now without concealment, in the Évole program, broadcast this Sunday but recorded on April 12.

The Minister of Labor and Social Economy and Second Vice President of the Government was interviewed by the journalist on a set set up as a Japanese restaurant. The look chosen by the candidate for the presidency of the Government was a gift from her father, Suso Díaz, a historic Galician trade unionist who sends her daughter packages of clothes from Ferrol so that she does not feel alone.

nicknamed At the fashion store, due to the careful styling that he exhibits, he has now become a militant of white, in this case bluish. They say that in politics white is synonymous with purity, honesty and power, the tone of perfection. For Yolanda, the fetish garment is like that song composed by Víctor Manuel with lyrics found in a poem by Blas de Otero and which led Ana Belén to the altars of the song: “Spain, white shirt of my Hope”, she seems to scream soberly and elegant the aspiring political leader to the left of the PSOE.

Who are you going to vote for in Madrid?

Yolanda Díaz will have to vote in Madrid in the next general elections, where by not running with Sumar, she will have to choose between the candidacy of Podemos or that of Más Madrid. In this video she explains her position: she or she votes for the party she represents in the Government or for Más Madrid, included in Sumar. “Man, Jordi, what do you think? You can imagine what I’m going to vote for, like all of Spain”: that’s how blunt he responded after Jordi Évole will urge you to choose between the list of Alejandra Jacinto or Mónica García. “You have to understand that I represent Sumar today, what we are going to try from Sumar is exactly that, try to add, and not reproduce these things that we see every day,” she added.

Yolanda Díaz opened up about Pablo Iglesias: “He’s a curmudgeon,” she said. “Negative politics is not done” and she confessed what he thinks about the former vice president’s harsh speeches: “I have already told him that he is quite grumpy, he is angry all the time,” she said.

The relationship between Yolanda Díaz and Pablo Iglesias has been changing throughout their political career. In her interview, she admitted that she would not like to get into the head of the former leader of Podemos: “I am a happy person, I don’t know,” she said, implying that Pablo Iglesias is not. She also revealed that she had a meeting with Podemos before the Sumar act: “They got up from the table and did not return,” she reproached. “Would you vote for someone in these conditions?” he asked himself before Évole, showing his anger at the impossibility of reaching agreements with Podemos and placing the responsibility on the purple formation for being impossible to run together in the general elections. As he has confessed, from the month of January until 15 days before the act in which he presented his candidacy with Sumar at the Magariños Sports Center, on April 1, Díaz has held meetings with all the political parties that could be included in the sum spectrum. However, he did not reach an agreement with Podemos. “There was a single meeting on a Monday with Podemos and they got up from that table and did not return to it,” he finished, to later add: “I trust that we are going to add collectively, but serious things should not be taken that way.”

He says that Sumar will do everything he can to “help so that very important positions are not won by the right”, but he added: “How are you going to ask the public to vote for you for a political program for which you need a multitude of agreements if you are not able to agree with those who think almost like you?”, a whole dart to Irene Montero, Ione Balerra and against Pablo Iglesias.

Yolanda Díaz’s harsh message to Pablo Iglesias when he took the hint when he called her “miserable” on Twitter

The second vice president of the Government also revealed what her conversation with the former leader of Podemos was when she was alluded to in a tweet in which Iglesias hinted that Díaz had not defended her companions with the ‘only yes is yes’ law. One of Pablo Iglesias’ first outbursts against Yolanda Díaz came under the law of ‘only yes is yes’. The former vice president stated on Twitter that “putting oneself in profile when a colleague is beaten is not only cowardly and miserable, but politically stupid.” A statement that the second vice president of the Government herself took personally. “I told him. A person who is so brilliant, to talk like that. I don’t insult anyone ever again. I told him that I don’t insult anyone and that I don’t share things.” “I was shocked when I heard it”:

When Jordi Évole showed him the separate Sumar and Podemos electoral ballots, he exclaimed: “I don’t want that!” “Sometimes I think that you are doing theater, Jordi Évole replied about his relationship with Podemos. “Do you think I put myself in profile?” replied the Minister of Labor after assuring that what she does not do is “radiate” things: “I don’t tell what I trade. You will never see me in politics insulting anyone. It is my political culture, I come from there”. He also made it clear that “he does not like praise” and that he feels somewhat uncomfortable when they are done, although he stressed that it happens with anyone, and not only with those who come from the PSOE .

Message to Podemos: “If you ask for clean cake unity, then it doesn’t matter if you shake hands”

Yolanda Díaz made a call to negotiate with discretion and recalled what happened to the pact between Izquierda Unida and Podemos after the commotion generated: “We lost a million votes.” In addition, she assured that the negotiation will be almost paralyzed until the elections on May 28. The tense moment in her relationship with Podemos was more evident when the second vice president of the Government and Sumar’s candidate in the general elections told Évole what is the point at which the relationship between the two formations is. “I know what people want,” she said, adding that after traveling 25,000 kilometers she has seen people from Podemos that she wanted to “walk with Sumar.” “I’ve seen people crying because they didn’t understand anything. The people of this country want us to shake hands,” she said.

Discrepancies with their own Government: Marlaska and Morocco

He made his position on the Sahara conflict clear: “Morocco is a dictatorship,” he said. The Sumar candidate added that she would “undoubtedly” break the agreement that Sánchez has with the King of Morocco to return to Spain’s traditional position regarding the Sahara. She commented on some of the measures that she would take if she became president of the Government , among them what would be their position on the Sahara. The Sumar candidate said she was “very clear” about her position in this regard and has confirmed that she would break “without a doubt” the agreement that Sánchez has with the King of Morocco to return to Spain’s traditional position regarding the Sahara . “I am aware that we must take our neighbor Morocco seriously, but we must also know that Morocco is what it is: a dictatorship,” settled.

Yolanda Díaz unceremoniously stated that she would have done resign to Marlaska for the Melilla fence tragedy: “There are things that cannot be allowed,” he said. “In politics one has to assume responsibilities,” he pointed out and described as “intolerable” what happened in the jump over the Melilla fence in which at least 23 migrants died in June 2022. Évole put his fingers in his mouth: “If you were president, would you keep a minister Marlaska in office?”: “If I were president, I would take that Ministry very seriously and designate a person to enforce human rights in our country and anywhere in the world”, concluded.

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