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Sánchez gives instructions by letter to his ministers and asks them to "honor the word given" and "fulfill the commitments"

In the first meeting of the Council of Ministers he warns of the "exacerbated" political climate and calls for "coordination" in the coalition.

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Sánchez gives instructions by letter to his ministers and asks them to "honor the word given" and "fulfill the commitments"

In the first meeting of the Council of Ministers he warns of the "exacerbated" political climate and calls for "coordination" in the coalition

The President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, has delivered a letter to the members of his Executive at the first meeting of the Council of Ministers that takes place this Wednesday in La Moncloa in which he urges them to fulfill the commitments made. "Let us honor our word and put our utmost effort into fulfilling the commitments made to a citizenry that deserves it more than ever," says the text to which Europa Press has had access.

Sánchez warns of the "exacerbated" political climate that is currently being felt, which he attributes to "those who not only deny the original legitimacy of this Executive, but also seek to question its legitimacy of exercise." He further notes that they will seek to "move forward" in the face of those who "seek to retreat by invoking the false security of a mythologized past."

In addition, it demands "maximum coordination" between all the members of the coalition that form PSOE and Sumar and highlights that in Europe the majority are governments made up of more than one political force. "We are going to carry out our work with maximum coordination between all departments to operate with agility, effectiveness and determination," he points out.

He assures that he will work tirelessly to "continue strengthening coexistence in an open, diverse and plural Spain" and will make territorial diversity "a cohesive factor to overcome the confrontation and confrontation that have caused so much damage."

And in this same line he maintains that the current Executive "is not articulated from the mere conjunction between the two political forces that make it up", but rather "makes that union its reason for being." For Sánchez, it is a debt to the citizens who demand from his Government "concrete responses to the" concrete problems "that mark the daily lives of millions of people, as he highlights.

In this way he has pointed out that in the face of "crispation", interested noise and insults, they must respond with work, dialogue and an outstretched hand and with a sincere appeal to harmony and coexistence.

In a three-page letter, Sánchez tells them that they are beginning a new stage in the democratic history of Spain and assume the exercise of the functions and powers that Title IV of the Constitution attributes to the executive branch. "The honor that carrying out this work entails is only comparable to the great responsibility we undertake by accepting it," he says.

Furthermore, he asks his Government for "maximum exemplarity and transparency" in the exercise of its functions because the citizens deserve it and therefore calls on its ministers to act from the vocation of service and in defense of the general interest "above all."

GOVERNMENT PRIORITIES

Furthermore, in the letter he conveys the Government's priorities for the coming years: "complete the modernization and transformation of our productive fabric in a green and digital key"; move towards full employment, with higher quality jobs and work-life balance and improve the purchasing power of the middle and working classes.

It also mentions the increase in resources for public education, health and dependency services; improve access to housing; promote the just ecological transition; advance in terms of equality and strengthen territorial cohesion.

He also points out that he wants to "advance the agenda of the reunion to guarantee harmony" and finally "reinforce Spain's leadership" at the European and international level. Sánchez also says that the Government declares itself deminist, will seek to promote social justice and will govern based on empirical evidence and science.

He considers that the country faces "enormous" challenges but has "solid foundations" such as: "talent, companies, infrastructure, civic values ​​and international prestige." also the "mostly European vocation of society, the solidity of the institutions that make ours a full and advanced democracy."