The Foundation for Analysis and Social Studies (FAES), chaired by former popular leader José María Aznar, has published an editorial this Friday on the last day of the campaign for the general elections on 23-J where it has defined the leader of Sumar, Yolanda Díaz, as “a neo-communist figurine hastily made with scraps of Dior and mediocre self-help literature”.

In this editorial, the FAES asks to “concentrate the vote” in the PP to build a “strong government” and defeat “sanchismo”, to which it has also dedicated a few words. “Sanchismo ends as it began: making lies the guiding principle of its conduct”, reads the letter with which he assures that he has filled the campaign with hoaxes of “continental size” and that he “assaulted La Moncloa”.

The article also analyzes the position of Pedro Sánchez during the electoral campaign, presenting Yolanda Díaz and her project, Sumar, as the only partner in the coalition. And he does it with words that appeal to the aesthetics of the candidate: “Sánchez consumes the end of the campaign determined to exhibit as the only partner for that eventual extension a neo-communist costume made in haste with Dior scraps and mediocre self-help literature.”

In this line, the candidate of the Popular Party, Alberto Núñez-Feijóo also charged this Thursday against Yolanda Díaz during a rally in Madrid where he compared “the made-up employment data”, which in his opinion the Sumar candidate offers, with his knowledge about the makeup of brushes and brushes. “Now, seeing the vice president who has the job, she knows a lot about makeup. There is no doubt,” he commented to the audience, laughing.

At the same time, although without expressly mentioning them, the Aznar Foundation refers to Vox as “a populist right born in the heat of omissions and resignations that have been overcome, grown in the polarization that sanchismo manufactured and with a resistant vocation rather than a governmental one.”

FAES takes advantage of the editorial to call for unity in the face of the challenges facing Spain: “It is time to restore the value of trust in the public sphere, in all its dimensions: trust of Spaniards among themselves, above partisan options; trust of the Government in society, because governing it is directing it, not supplanting it; and trust of society in its institutions, because they belong to everyone and remain while those who occupy them at any moment take over.” The article ends with a plea for “unity” and “freedom”, and it does so by encouraging “to vote for the PP”.