The controversial poster placed by the Desokupa company continues to generate controversy. Just yesterday, the PSOE denounced before the Central Electoral Board a “new canvas of hate” installed in Madrid by the extrajudicial eviction company Desokupa in which an image of the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, appears and the phrase ‘You to Morocco, Desokupa to Moncloa!’.
Ferraz sources reported that they also plan to file a criminal complaint against this canvas, displayed on Atocha street number 35 in the capital.
“We hope that these dirty campaign practices will be penalized by citizens, and that they will be condemned by all political parties. Hate cannot be the protagonist of the electoral campaign,” the same sources point out.
This company already tried to enter the electoral campaign last May by calling a demonstration in Barcelona and provoking several acts in the Bonavova area, where there were several properties with squatters.
In addition, the placement of the sign has generated controversy among the residents, according to testimonies collected by the Ser chain. “At no time did they tell us what it was, because we would have said no. They have deceived us. We are super angry and wanting it to be taken away from us, and they tell us that it will be there for three weeks, it’s crazy,” says the president of the neighborhood community, who prefers to remain anonymous.
On the front of the canvas is a photograph of the owner of Desokupa along with another of Sánchez and, behind him, an image of the Falcon plane and another of a Moroccan flag.
On one side, the phrase ‘In eight years we have recovered the homes of 7,600 families with 0 convictions’ is printed. We will miss you all’ and below images of Podemos politicians such as Pablo Iglesias, Irene Montero, Pablo Echenique, Ione Belarra, Alejandra Jacinto, together with the former mayor of Barcelona Ada Colau; the ERC spokesman in Congress, Gabriel Rufián; and the former socialist deputy Juan Bernardo Fuentes Curbelo, accused in the Mediator case.
Recently, and after receiving complaints from the PSOE and the Spanish Association against Conversion Therapies, the Electoral Board of the Madrid Zone ordered Vox to remove an advertising banner that it installed in the capital with the slogan ‘Decide what matters’.
On that canvas appeared a hand with a Spanish flag bracelet that was throwing the LGTBI flag or the logo of the feminist movement into a trash can.