Spain has the Iberian exception. Not only in terms of the possibility of limiting the price of fuel. The People’s Party is the only one of its kind in Europe that has not vetoed the far right by allying with Vox to rule in Castilla y León. The PSOE is also the only organization with social democratic inspiration to rule in alliance with the extreme anti-system left in Europe. But the socialists, who also relied on the Catalan separatists and the heirs of the terrorist group ETA, have so far been able to see the stigma in someone else’s eye, not their own. This is also part of our exceptionality as short-legged and sectarian Visigoths.
Therefore, perhaps taking advantage of the neighboring situation with Marine Le Pen, Sánchez asked Feijóo to break away from the far-right, as his European colleagues had done. Feijóo could also have asked PSOE not to consider United We Can if they acted reciprocally, which has recently, apparently, only clashed in salutation, and in the process is relieved of this burdensome burden on the heir to the crime. Bildu in Navarre. They may be slapping their miserable addictions in their faces until the day of reckoning.
The problem begins the moment the Spaniards decide to break with bipartisanship and surrender to new alternative solutions. But for this to happen in such a rigid society, a spell had to be broken first: left voters with socialists, right voters with popular ones. United We Can, which the PSOE managed to minimize thanks to its cohort, was born out of anger over the political and economic crisis. On the other hand, in its moment of victory, Vox emerged from an angry reaction to the drift of the left as a right-wing Spanish nationalism. Both are children of our radical anger.