The presenter of El Programa de Ana Rosa, Ana Rosa Quintana is about to go on vacation until next September. Although she always usually leaves before her, a few weeks ago she decided to delay her days off to accompany her viewers in the 23J elections. “Next Monday and Tuesday I am here to analyze the electoral results,” said the journalist.

Although there were many doubts about the electoral results last Sunday, Quintana announced his personal cheer to the audience: 155 seats for the Popular Party, 110 seats for the PSOE, 30 seats for the VOX party and 27 seats for Yolanda Díaz’s party, Sumar. Ana Rosa was sure that Feijóo would win the elections and form a government with the support of the Greens: “One thing is clear and that is that everyone thinks the PP is the winner and all the sums are given as winners.” But the results were not so bad for the PSOE and the Popular Party was left with 136 seats, so they do not add up and nothing is guaranteed.

At the start of her program this Monday, Quintana appeared very serious and congratulated the political leaders who achieved good results in the elections. ”Congratulations to Alberto Nuñez Feijóo, winner of the elections, and Pedro Sánchez, loser of the elections,” said the communicator with a certain irony.

He has also stated that the results leave us with an “uncertain scenario” and has acknowledged that yesterday’s session was “frantic” and historic. When she met with her collaborators, Ana Rosa joked about the cheering they did last week and declared that they were all wrong and that what they least expected was that “Puigdemont would have the key to governance.”

“This is a bitter victory and a sweet defeat,” said the Madrilenian, quoting Alfonso Guerra, who pronounced that phrase in 1996 after José María Aznar’s victory at the polls.

Both the veteran presenter and the collaborators of her political table have recognized that Sánchez emerges stronger than ever from these elections, since while everyone considered him ‘dead’, he has resisted and has even improved the data from previous elections.

“Victory has many fathers and defeat until now was an orphan,” Ana Rosa Quintana reflected before a group of colleagues who agreed with her in her “successful” political analysis.