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Gamarra denies that the PP leadership is upset with Ayuso and says that Sánchez's "obsession" is to wear Feijóo down

He assures that the polls show that Feijóo is consolidated and that today he would win the elections.

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Gamarra denies that the PP leadership is upset with Ayuso and says that Sánchez's "obsession" is to wear Feijóo down

He assures that the polls show that Feijóo is consolidated and that today he would win the elections

MADRID, 10 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The general secretary of the PP, Cuca Gamarra, has denounced this Thursday that the party's national leadership is upset with the Madrid president, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, and has stressed that the "only obsession" of the Prime Minister is to "wear out" Alberto Núñez Feijóo instead of dealing with the country's problems, a strategy that "the Spaniards pay for". However, she has said that the PP will not enter the "rag" and will continue to opt for a "constructive and useful" opposition.

"We invite Sánchez to insult us less, disqualify us less and listen to us more", Gamarra declared in an interview on Telecinco, which Europa Press has picked up, to add that "insults and disqualifications" by the Popular Party "do not go to find".

In his opinion, Sánchez's statements show a "real disconnection" of Sánchez from "the Spanish reality and the problems" that citizens have. According to him, he added, "his only obsession is to attack the leader of the opposition to wear him down."

"That is what he spends his time on and where he sets priorities. And this has a consequence: the Spanish pay for that strategy because he does not spend his time governing," he said, adding that Sánchez "is very clear that he has very little time in La Moncloa and the only thing he seeks is to hold on through the transfers to his parliamentary partners".

At this point, he criticized the fact that the Government is considering a reform of the crime of sedition so that the independence leaders "can return to Spain and do not have to go to jail". "That's what he does because those are the ones who rule over him," he stressed.

Gamarra has indicated that the country "needs a constructive and useful opposition" such as that of the PP and has added that what Pedro Sánchez is hoping for is for his party to "enter the rag" and "smear the political scene".

However, he has insisted that the country needs proposals and that is why this week he has presented a plan to alleviate the rise in mortgages, with a tax deduction of up to 750 euros in the next two years. "We are going to continue on this path of the useful proposal and not go into disqualification because it is not what Spain deserves or what Spaniards need", he declared.

Given the Government's criticism of the PP and its message that Isabel Díaz Ayuso is the boss of the PP, Gamarra pointed out that Pedro Sánchez's strategy shows that "he is very comfortable opposing, more comfortable than governing."

"This is a problem that the Spaniards have, that they do not have a government because the president is dedicated to opposing the opposition at the most complicated moment and absolutely everything is worth it," he emphasized.

Gamarra has pointed out that this opposition "is only made to the PP" because those on whom he depends to continue in La Moncloa "he does not say a word" but rather treats them with "delicacy and gentleness worthy of someone to whom he owes a lot ".

Given the information that there are people who are not happy with Ayuso's statements because they can lead Feijóo to a less centrist position, Gamarra has indicated that the image of the president of the PP "is very important" and "they protect him well from the attacks by Pedro Sánchez to try to weaken it".

Asked then if the national leadership of the PP is upset with the president of the Community of Madrid, the general secretary of the Popular Party has flatly denied it. "No, quite the opposite," she declared.

When asked about Feijóo's stagnation in the polls, Gamarra stated that there are polls that "are constantly showing that the alternative is consolidating" and that "if there were elections in Spain today, Feijóo would win them, not the Prime Minister ". In addition, she has alluded to a latest poll on Catalonia that points to a "strong rise in the PP" in an "important" autonomous community.