The new president of the Balearic Parliament, Vox deputy Gabriel Le-Senne, has his Twitter account full of homophobic, sexist and denier comments about both vaccines and climate change. In one of the most striking, he says that women are more belligerent “because they lack a penis.”
“How do we help the terminally ill? Do we guarantee palliative care? No, we tell them: if you want, we’ll kill you. How do we help pregnant women? Do we guarantee them support to be mothers? No, we tell them: if you want , we killed your daughter,” he says in another. “It seems that Feijóo’s Galicia was in favor of compulsory vaccination. There, each one with what they vote for, but it is clear once again that the party of freedom is Vox,” he adds.
Le Senne, who was elected president this Tuesday with the votes in favor of the PP and Vox, also writes articles in a digital newspaper on the Islands and on a web page called La Trinchera Digital from which he has defended that there was a conspiracy against Donald Trump and from where he criticizes the aid to women victims of sexist violence.
“How do you explain the flow of money around 50 annual victims of ‘macho terrorism’, as they have called it, while the 4,000 people who commit suicide every year in Spain are ignored?”, one of these publications asks. . He also criticizes “the show that they have organized” destroying the basic principles of Law “because of the very few trans people there are.”
The new president speaks of “sanitary totalitarianism” in relation to the measures against the covid “due to a virus that is probably artificial financed with Chinese and American public funds.”
In another article, he ironized the need to impose “Islam” in schools. “At least they will free us from gender, from LGTBI, from democratic memory and all that,” she says. “We ‘ultra-Catholics’ will get along better because we know that deep down everything is under control,” she adds. Le-Senne is the author of the book ‘God set us free: an apology for Catholicism and liberalism’ and defines himself as a ‘Catholic and liberal’.