Alberto Núñez Feijóo: "If the vote were held tomorrow, I think the People's Party would win an absolute majority."

"If there were elections tomorrow, I am convinced that the PP would win an absolute majority . A pact straight from the ballot box with a commitment: 'Govern, return to political normality, embrace the democratic regeneration that must take place in your country, get this country working again, unite Spaniards, tear down the wall, and let's start again to build the Spain of dialogue, the Spain of consensus, and the Spain of progress.' I am convinced that this would happen," he said.
Looking ahead to the upcoming elections, Feijóo has expressed his commitment to securing "10 million votes" and forming "a solo government," without the need to make a pact with Vox, although he acknowledges that if they do not achieve that absolute majority, they will have to make a pact with them .
On the other hand, regarding the attack on Sánchez , regarding his wife's family's "sauna-brothel" business, the Popular Party leader argued that he felt it was necessary to introduce it into public conversation because "it is an unacceptable pharisaism to present himself as a champion of the illegalization of prostitution ."
" You can't accept lessons in morality from immorality . I've written a report rather than a critique, and with a much higher ethical standard than his, because I didn't lie. Lessons in morality and exemplary conduct, none," he argued before calling the Prime Minister "arrogant and rude." "He's a politician who has fraud in his DNA. Enough is enough," he emphasized.
In the interview, Feijóo attacked Sánchez, accusing him of leading "a corrupt government" and predicted that the PSOE will be "punished" by voters "for a long time" due to the corruption scandals. "We have enough corruption scandals for the government to have already dissolved the Cortes and called elections. How far will it go? To what Aldama wants to tell us, what Ábalos wants to tell us, or what the Civil Guard or the judges might discover," he stated.
In this sense, he believes the government will fall "if Ábalos and Aldama want it to," and they are "key" people in determining whether the legislature will end in 2027 or earlier.
"We'll see what happens in the fall," he said, adding that Sánchez "would be nothing" without Ábalos. "He's a key player in Sánchez's promotion," he affirmed.
Asked about Cerdán , Feijóo admitted that he has doubts about the role he could have played and noted that the important thing "is that he knows the limits Sánchez set for him to continue in the government." "Cerdán can speak and explain to all citizens what the moral relativity of Mr. Sánchez's politics is," he insisted.
He also criticized the fact that the government's partners "have become accomplices" and warned that if they continue supporting the executive, "they will become cover-ups and will begin to suffer obvious electoral wear and tear, because the majority of voters are decent people." "The wear and tear on the partners' shoulders from maintaining a government surrounded by corruption is beginning to be more critical than what they may have achieved with the privileges they received from supporting the investiture," he emphasized.
Finally, he doesn't believe Sánchez emerged strengthened from the last plenary session in Congress, where he saw some "very uncomfortable partners, with no answers for their electorate," and a president "captive to what he knows, what he did, and what he allowed to happen."
"When you're sure your collaborators have betrayed you or lied to you, you have to come out with enormous conviction and anger at the situation you find yourself in. I've seen a president surrounded, crushed, and devastated," he asserted.

Voting intentions for the PSOE have plummeted in the latest CIS poll , reducing its lead over the PP to half a point, although after the "Cerdán case" it remains the most voted party, according to data from the latest CIS poll, which has also boosted Vox .
The PSOE maintains its lead in voting intentions in July, according to the latest survey by the Center for Sociological Research (CIS) , although it has significantly reduced its lead over the PP to almost equal terms, with a difference of just half a point.
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