Yolanda Díaz, by Xavier Sardà

Allow me, Madam Minister, the words of a disoriented observer because of his strange behavior.

Let’s see, things in politics are usually schematic, prototypical and almost wink-like. Things in politics are primary colors like red and blue and not tertiary like reddish orange, yellow-orange, or bluish-green. Things in politics are, Madam Minister, not listening to the adversary and gesturing a lot shaking his head in disgust, squinting his eyes and pursing his lips.

Things in politics are often set as the “mutual assured destruction & rdquor ;, which said that any use of nuclear weapons could cause the complete destruction of the two powers in the Cold War.

This being the case, I wonder, Madam Minister, how can you be so disorienting. How is it possible that his way of speaking is always calm, sedative and like a mezzo-soprano from A Coruña? How can you, being so powerful, deal so calmly with incisor and canine entrepreneurs without barely showing your molars? How can you get so much political gain from the majority party of the governing coalition, with hardly losing measure or prudence? How can you be so red and not teach doctrine, catechism or dogmas?

The Camino de Santiago is long, hard and sometimes tedious. You studied law at the very University of Santiago de Compostela. Come on, while some were going, you saw them coming from afar. And now, years later, the minimum wage is going up and not precisely because of the apostle.

In short, that you, minister, demonstrate that you can get results without getting lost. Camus said that in politics it is the means that must justify the end.

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Be that as it may, the feeling you convey is that he is interested in political issues to improve society. When they call her “communist minister & rdquor; in a contemptuous tone, you do not respond by qualifying deputy pepera politically. His calm makes them desperate. Let it last.

And now, the labor reform. Glups!

Reference-www.elperiodico.com

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