Diana Morant defended in Valencia this afternoon that it is the socialists who have the capacity to “stop the alliance of hate” that took shape this past weekend in Madrid with “the gathering of the extreme right, of Milei, Le Pen or “Abascal”. She said it in her speech at the rally held by the PSOE in this city to open the electoral campaign, with the presence of Pedro Sánchez, José Luís Rodríguez Zapatero and Teresa Ribera.
“We are also the alternative to the PP and Vox alliance, to those who censor culture, to those who reduce people’s rights or want to erase the memory of the victims of Francoism or the dictatorship.” And he added that “those who define themselves as grandchildren of winners of the war will have in front of them the grandchildren of those who lost fighting for freedom and democracy.” In her speech, the minister and leader of the PSPV stressed that “we must go back to building a better Europe, we do not want to return to a Europe that lacks solidarity with refugees, a neoliberal and unjust Europe.”
The Spaniards, he pointed out, “prevented Feijóo and Abascal, who want to beat us to the punch and want to hang the president by his feet, from winning on 23-J.” The worst thing, he said, “is not hearing them say those things, the worst thing is that they are in institutions like the Valencian Community, where a vice president of Vox wants to name a Valencian hiking route after a Francoist general and they don’t do it.” “We are going to allow it.”
In this regard, he stated that “these people do not represent Valencians, those who separate themselves from a banner against a sexist murder, who censor our poets.” Also that “we are alongside the teachers who are demonstrating in the first educational strike against the Mazón government; with the health workers, with the students who ask for peace, with Miguel Hernández and Vicent Andrés Estellés and with the recognition of the Palestinian people.”
Diana Morant has made reference to the results of the Catalan campaign. “In Catalonia, useful politics and uniting people with others have won. The Catalans gave us clear and clear support, of generosity and forgiveness, promoted by the PSOE, thinking about the people far from electoral strategies.” “On many occasions we felt alone, we were the only ones who defended coexistence. We were right, Catalonia has proven us right,” she concluded.