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Yolanda Díaz avoids entering into more controversies with Iglesias, Podemos or Morocco and affirms that she focuses on useful politics

MADRID, 18 Abr.

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Yolanda Díaz avoids entering into more controversies with Iglesias, Podemos or Morocco and affirms that she focuses on useful politics

MADRID, 18 Abr. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The second vice president, Yolanda Díaz, has avoided this Tuesday at a press conference answering questions about her role in the 28M campaign, her position on Morocco, if there was more distance with Podemos or about her relationship with former vice president Pablo Iglesias, underlining that he was going to focus on matters of "useful politics".

During an appearance in New York, after defending a resolution on the social economy before the United Nations General Assembly, Díaz was questioned by the media on various issues related to her interview last Sunday on the program 'Salvados'.

For example, and regarding Iglesias's statement that her words, which she defined as a "salad of hosts", distanced Podemos and Sumar further, the head of Labor has indicated that she would love to answer that question but she should not and could not do so , because it was focused on "useful politics".

Also questioned about whether she maintained or qualified that Morocco was a dictatorship, as she launched on Sunday, the vice president limited herself to stating that she appreciates the support of this nation for the resolution on the social economy, something that made her happy since she maintains a daily management with the country on policies related to workers.

In turn, he has avoided entering into the position that he was going to maintain in the campaign for the regional elections of 28-M, which formations he was going to support during the electoral acts and if United We Can was among them.

On the other hand, the Minister of Labor has pointed out during her appearance in the "questioning" made by the "right-wing populisms" of the feminist movement and trade unionism, two key sectors to broaden democracy.

"It is no coincidence and they do it simply because they know the importance of the enormous power of transformation that these two movements have," added Díaz to claim the need to continue defending unionism and feminism, because there can be no change in the world without women.