Anyone says anything to the president of the Spanish Government! With so much booing, Pedro Sánchez has been getting away with low blows lately and that in boxing subtracts points. And in foreign policy, credibility.

The discreet balance of the Spanish six-month presidency of the European Union turned into an extension of the Spanish chicken coop yesterday at the Strasbourg session and more than one parliamentarian must have thought that Europe only lacks our picturesque fights, as if the Pell de Brau cares about a turnip.

Pedro Sánchez presides over the Government of Spain, a country that cannot wage war on its own with Israel – unless we no longer believe in the EU – and even less rub the Third Reich in the face of a democratic representative of Germany , a country that helped us a lot to get out of the Franco regime and to receive European funds.

Even if the mention made him an ideological opponent, Manfred Weber, I doubt that it would be any fun for the rest of the German representatives.

It is not a question of mentioning the merits of Germany after Nazism and the exemplary way in which it distanced itself from its past. Hitting them with a flist-flast like the one in Strasbourg yesterday is cheap, easy and free.

I already understand that criticism, low blows and shells are raining in Moncloa for the amnesty law. Many, unworthy and disproportionate. But did anyone think it would be a cakewalk, as happened with the pardons? Anyone surprised? And what is still left (the president’s partners are the first to make his colors come out with this hobby to demand and demand). Temp, president, temp…

After all, Pedro Sánchez has reason to be satisfied: he will eat the nougat in Moncloa. What a great gift from heaven and the electorate Vox is for the left! The closest thing to electoral life insurance. And a source of legitimacy and democratic superiority for those who say they are fighting them (even if it comes first that Vox doesn’t disappear). But we’re not here to lecture German conservatives either… We all have a past.