Moncloa changes the debate to achieve an image of unity in the coalition: “The government remains for a while”

by time news

PSOE and Podemos they have put aside differences and internal clashes to expedite the agreement on pensions in order to “revalue the standard of living of the elderly”. After intense negotiations, the coalition government’s proposal has finally received the go-ahead from Brussels.

The second vice president and head of Labor and Social Economy, Yolanda Díaz, has entered into this pact that “recovers rights”. “It is a feminist reform but, above all, it is authentically redistributive”, pointed out the minister.

Joy also shared by the person in charge of Finance and Public Function. In the opinion of María Jesús Montero, this agreement reached demonstrates the block stability of coalition “beyond the specific discrepancies”.

“Faced with those doomsayers who are asking for elections all day or saying that the Government has no stability, from minute one this Government has allowed the biggest reforms of the last decade to be carried out,” he specified.

The coalition holds

A 180-degree turn in the discourse after a turbulent week, of distanced positions and reproaches on issues such as the law of ‘only yes is yes’.

In this regard, the purples have considered a “betrayal of feminism” the pact that the socialists have reached with the opposition to add votes and carry out the proposal. For its part, the socialist wing has reiterated that the rule was not “working” and that it was necessary to correct these “undesired effects.”

Despite these disagreements, both formations have made it clear that there are more things that unite them than separate them. “The government is stable and will continue to be so. is a legislature especially fruitful from the point of view of advances in rights, but also of social cohesion and the reinforcement of the Welfare State”, remarked Félix Bolaños, Minister of the Presidency.

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