The same speed with which the PSOE has maneuvered this morning to withdraw the reform of the Land Law has been used by Sumar to ignore the false step taken by the socialist part of the Government.

“They knew that they did not count on us, not even a single one of their investiture partners. And putting yourself in the hands of the PP is not a good recipe, because then it lets you fall,” Iñigo Errejón summarized. Sumar’s parliamentary spokesperson has accused the socialists of trusting that the popular ones will take “the chestnuts out of the fire” and that is why he has called on the PSOE to stick to the government agreements to return “stability” to the first section of the legislature. .

Errejón has pointed out that the socialists were aware when they promoted this law “quickly and running” that it would be rejected by the party led by Sumar, and also by the rest of the parliamentary partners. And he has explained that the project is a “ball-hit law more typical of the path that Aznar marked.” That is why he “aspired to get this rule with the PP” whose change of position he frames in the “electoral calculations” of the popular ones.

Sumar’s spokesperson has advocated negotiating and improving the text because, according to him, governments “are not there to stay, they are there to transform things” and their formation is “reliable and always goes to the end” for this purpose. . “You do not advance by trusting in the PP, you advance by trusting in your own forces and your own majorities,” he stressed.

The withdrawal of the Land Law comes two days after the plenary session of Congress on Tuesday overturned the PSOE’s bill against pimping. A rule rejected by Sumar and the rest of the parliamentary allies and that the PP contributed to overturning by also voting against it.