Felipe VI is more bored than his father, by Matías Vallés

The royal message of Christmas Eve is coming, but the words of Felipe VI will be bricked up because of the silent presence of his father in the box of a tennis match, like a Bamiyan Buddha that no dynamiter manages to demolish. The current King’s speech will return to shore the dramatic schism within the family, although the collective pandemic offers an ideal envelope to camouflage the rampant infection in Zarzuela.

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The hypothetical return of Juan Carlos I Spain causes more noise than the continuous presence in the same country of Felipe VI, a head of state who will reach the democratic summit of sharing anonymity with the president of Switzerland, perhaps not the best example. The audience’s verdict conforms to the perception about the mood of the protagonists. The King is more bored than his father on the throne, the paralyzing effort not to make a mistake translates into a civil servant parsimony, compared to the dynamism of a thirsty father who was guided by the adventurer’s guidelines.

It runs in the family to Felipe VI, he has inherited, while his father had to invent a monarchy as detested by the dictatorship as by the progressive forces. The excellent training of Juan Carlos I In order to survive the Franco regime, it gave it a margin of advantage even over the democratic rulers. She amassed far more power than her son will ever have, even though both are theoretically molded by the same text constitutional. In his fierce combination of leisure and business, the re-founder of the dynasty has also overwhelmed by his political dominance all the kings who are part of the decoration of old Europe. Like Charles Dickens and John LeCarré, the son tries to circumvent the punishable parental conduct while preserving his influence, with little success to date. Juan Carlos I and Felipe VI embody the two antagonistic approaches to human existence. The rogue and the diligent, equivalent to Vittorio Gassman and Trintignant in ‘The Escape’, it is superfluous to wonder which of them made the audience fall in love.

Reference-www.elperiodico.com

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