The president of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, has taken with humor the version of the TV3 program Polònia about her of the song Zorra de Nebulossa, winner of the Benidorm Fest. In her case, according to the format’s comedians, the term she should use would be “facha.”

And the leader considers it almost a compliment. “If you tell me that, for example, turning on the tap in any house in Madrid and there is water, it means being a facha: ‘Here’s the facha,'” Ayuso pointed out in an interview on Telecinco.

The president of the Community of Madrid has not tired of giving examples of what, for her, it means to be a facha: “If we lower taxes for the people who work hard in Madrid, for the people, for the self-employed, for merchants, and help them with their lives, it’s like: ‘Here we are.'”

Ayuso has used irony to refer to the song that will represent Spain in Eurovision 2024. “I don’t know if I like the original or this one more,” he continued in his interview.

Along these lines, he has taken his management of his executive to task to censure that in Madrid everything is described as “facha” because we are in the “fachosphere”, alluding to the term used by the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, in his interview in The vanguard.

And he has not missed the opportunity to make a comparison with other communities. “Madrid is all faça, facha, facha,” she continued. But, in his opinion, “on the other side of the wall” (referring to Catalonia), the world is very dark and very cold.”

Thus, he has defended that his government is doing “great things.” “We are in a moment in which we are doing great things, I think the best in Madrid in a long time. Maybe we will all be badasses in Madrid, but there we are,” he concluded.