During these weeks, television sets have become a place where political leaders go to defend their electoral program, ahead of the July 23 elections. Although, yes, the reproaches have been the dominant trend in these interviews, and it seems that they have proposed not to get along with each other.

However, sometimes the personal life of each candidate transcends and takes center stage in certain programs. Ana Rosa Quintana has welcomed the Galician politician Alberto Núñez Feijóo this Monday and they have talked about everything, including the problem that the choice of her last name has caused with her father.

“Everything I have learned in these 30 years, I put it in the hands of the Spanish,” Alberto Núñez Feijóo assured this Monday in The Ana Rosa Program. The leader of the Popular Party has once again been interviewed by Ana Rosa Quintana shortly after having attended Telecinco’s morning show.

Among other things, the Galician has addressed issues such as gender violence, LGTBI rights or his position against Pedro Sánchez. But the conversation has not ended without addressing an aspect that has troubled the presenter. “To me it is that the feijóoism thing did not… he has stayed with Feijóo, the father’s last name…”, Quintana began to comment.

And it is that Ana Rosa Quintana is surprised that the leader of the PP bears her mother’s surname as a flag, and not her father’s. “It is a discussion that I have had with my father from time to time,” Feijóo began to recount. “They knew me like that in Galicia and I’m not going to change just because I came here,” he defended.

Just a few days ago, Alberto Núñez Feijóo was interviewed by Pablo Motos on his program El Hormiguero. An appearance that was overshadowed by a controversy that flooded social networks in criticism of the Galician politician.

“Today I saw a very good advertisement. Price of oranges, kilo: 0.12 euros. Price of plastic bag: 0.15 euros. Do you think that a plastic bag is worth more than a kilo of oranges? What’s the point? in a huge inflation to put the plastic tax on January 1 when the majority of the EU have postponed it for a better occasion?”, expressed the leader of the PP.

A statement that in a few minutes dominated the conversations of users on social networks. “I want to buy the oranges where Feijóo buys them: 0.12!!!!”, published a Twitter user. And, according to various portals, the price of oranges fluctuates between €0.90 and €1.69 €.

Other political leaders did not miss the opportunity to comment on the matter. ”How can someone claim to be Prime Minister by saying that a kilo of oranges in Spain costs €0.12? Mr. Feijóo does not know in which country he lives, nor how much he charges, “said Yolanda Díaz through her Twitter account.