Alberto Núñez Feijóo does not renounce the absolute majority, like those of Andalusia, Madrid or Galicia. His claim continues to be a solo government, in order to have a stable government. For the president of the PP this means that the president of the Government “can appoint and dismiss his ministers”, and that it be a government “without blackmail or ties, a free government, that has no more interests than that of the people, and focused on what is important”.
The leader of the PP closes this electoral campaign with rallies in Malaga and A Coruña, after doing so on Thursday night in Madrid. Feijóo wants to replace, with that absolute majority, a government “obsessed with commanding, but not with governing, with placing his friends in positions, even if they are not necessary.”
Change them, explains the president of the PP, because “those from the Government did not know how to arrive, because they deceived us with the pacts; they did not know how to be, because they divided us; and they do not know how to leave, because they only have disqualifications left, against judges, journalists, farmers, irrigators, all of us who disagree with the Government “.
On the other hand, he promises that “I will know how to get there”, because he will only try to form a government “if I win”; he will know how to be, because “I have no commitment to anyone, I do not have to pay any toll to anyone”, and he assures that he will know how to leave, because he will leave “a better country”.
For all this, he asks for a vote, a useful vote for the entire electoral spectrum, from left to right, he asks all those who want a change, because “I am not asking for the vote so that everything remains the same, but so that a necessary change is made in Spain”.
It also clarifies why he is asking for the vote, and above all why not. “I am not asking for the vote to lead a bloc of parties, but to be president of all Spaniards and unblock the country.” He assures that he wants to reach the Government “without the intention of revenge”, but to repeal what he considers to be detrimental to the country, to reform what can be improved, “and if there is something -he assured- that is good, that there will be, we will leave it as it is”. Alberto Núñez Feijóo insists that “we have not come to break anything, we have not come to take revenge on anyone”, but to govern for all Spaniards.
The president of the PP asked for the vote to the right and left, because “it is impossible to lie to the Spanish so much.” A vote that allows him to “vote without blockades”, a Government, he says, “in one piece”, a “president who names the ministers” and a “Government for Spain”. It is about, he stressed, making a “cordial, serene and sensible change.”
Feijóo did not want to close his campaign without thanking the portfolios, “for the effort they have had to make”, despite the scarcity of resources they have had.