Post by account_disabled on Mar 13, 2024 22:57:25 GMT -5
What they presented as the only "civilized divorce" in the long list of ruptures that Podemos has experienced in its less than seven years of life has led to another bitter war by the state leadership against the anti-capitalist Teresa Rodríguez . The Cádiz deputy was expelled from Adelante Andalucía after breaking ties with Pablo Iglesias for opposing the entry of Podemos into the Government. After the expulsions, withdrawals from militancy or withdrawals of Sergio Pascual, Luis Alegre, Rita Maestre, Carolina Bescansa, Íñigo Errejón and his people or Ramón Espinar, among many other fallen who left Podemos in the midst of a spectacle of crossed accusations, the leader of the party, Pablo Iglesias, managed to make the break with the Anticapitalists appear calm and mutually agreeable in February.
What was agreed was not to make a scandal," summarizes the general secretary of the PCE and person of Iglesias's utmost confidence, Enrique Santiago, whose formation - together with IU - piloted the AOL Email List expulsion of Teresa Rodríguez from the parliamentary group of Adelante Andalucía, when the second vice president had committed to keeping the Anticapitalist positions in the institutions. Coexistence was hell after years of tug-of-war over financial control, the census, the lists, the leadership, and now also over the advisors, the group's money... And, at the end of the day, also over the darts of Rodríguez's men for "subordinating" themselves to the . A former Podemos leader summarizes to Efe that the movement in the Andalusian bloc is framed by fear over Teresa Rodríguez's criticism of the role of a Unidas Podemos that governs with the PSOE, and the recent polls that give her 5% of the votes.
Without Podemos or IU. With this breeding ground, Rodríguez was expelled from Adelante Andalucía accused of being a turncoat and the gesture was followed by mutual reproaches between the two parties in the media and social networks that reached their climax with the intervention on Friday by the Minister of Equality and number two of Podemos, Irene Montero . Both IU and Podemos refer to autonomous decisions of their organizations in Andalusia, although sources from these parties assume that the operation was coordinated with the state directorates. Montero's words - "politics does not stop while we are on sick leave" (in this case maternal) or "you receive your entire political salary even if you have left the party that brought you to the institutions" - showed the emotional involvement of the leadership of Podemos in the operation. And Teresa Rodríguez's response - "with this argument a businessman can tell a worker 'the factory doesn't stop because of your.
What was agreed was not to make a scandal," summarizes the general secretary of the PCE and person of Iglesias's utmost confidence, Enrique Santiago, whose formation - together with IU - piloted the AOL Email List expulsion of Teresa Rodríguez from the parliamentary group of Adelante Andalucía, when the second vice president had committed to keeping the Anticapitalist positions in the institutions. Coexistence was hell after years of tug-of-war over financial control, the census, the lists, the leadership, and now also over the advisors, the group's money... And, at the end of the day, also over the darts of Rodríguez's men for "subordinating" themselves to the . A former Podemos leader summarizes to Efe that the movement in the Andalusian bloc is framed by fear over Teresa Rodríguez's criticism of the role of a Unidas Podemos that governs with the PSOE, and the recent polls that give her 5% of the votes.
Without Podemos or IU. With this breeding ground, Rodríguez was expelled from Adelante Andalucía accused of being a turncoat and the gesture was followed by mutual reproaches between the two parties in the media and social networks that reached their climax with the intervention on Friday by the Minister of Equality and number two of Podemos, Irene Montero . Both IU and Podemos refer to autonomous decisions of their organizations in Andalusia, although sources from these parties assume that the operation was coordinated with the state directorates. Montero's words - "politics does not stop while we are on sick leave" (in this case maternal) or "you receive your entire political salary even if you have left the party that brought you to the institutions" - showed the emotional involvement of the leadership of Podemos in the operation. And Teresa Rodríguez's response - "with this argument a businessman can tell a worker 'the factory doesn't stop because of your.