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The PSOE studies "all legal avenues" regarding the concentration in Ferraz in which a Sánchez doll was beaten

He believes that it could be a "hate crime" and demands an opinion from the PP: "When you do not condemn, you are an accomplice".

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The PSOE studies "all legal avenues" regarding the concentration in Ferraz in which a Sánchez doll was beaten

He believes that it could be a "hate crime" and demands an opinion from the PP: "When you do not condemn, you are an accomplice"

MADRID, 1 Ene. (EUROPA PRESS) -

THE PSOE has indicated that it is studying "all legal avenues" in response to the New Year's Eve rally in front of its national headquarters, located on Ferraz Street in Madrid, in which some protesters hung and beat up a doll of the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez. .

"The PSOE is studying all the legal avenues that affect both the participants, the organizers and the presenters on the official channel of the event that was held last night on Ferraz Street," the party reported in a publication on the social network. X, in which he warned that what happened "may be included in a hate crime."

The party led by Sánchez has thus condemned what happened at the New Year's Eve rally in Ferraz, an event that was called by Revuelta, a youth organization in the Vox orbit. Up to 300 people, according to the Government Delegation in Madrid, participated in the rally, in which insults were shouted against the head of the Executive, who was represented with a doll that several protesters choked and beat.

In this regard, the PSOE has stressed that what happened is what the party "has been warning about for a long time." "There are political parties and organizations of all kinds that are instilling hatred in Spanish society and we democrats must put our foot down," he lamented.

Likewise, he has criticized that "Vox and its satellite organizations endorse these types of acts" and has asked for the opinion of the Popular Party and its leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, as well as that of the president of the Madrid PP and the Community of Madrid, Isabel Diaz Ayuso.

"We want to know what opinion a party that calls itself 'state' has. When it is not condemned, it is an accomplice," the PSOE concluded.