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There were many voices that already suggested a step back from Iglesias so that Irene Montero could assume control. But how has Pablo Iglesias managed to subvert these negotiations in which Sánchez had managed to position himself as a victim and was getting electoral benefits from it? The latest barometers published by the CIS showed this: the socialists would be the most voted today. A forceful intervention in Congress On the first day of the investiture debate, most of the headlines in the Spanish press focused on the severe clash between the socialist.
Candidate for the investiture, Pedro Sánchez, and Pablo Iglesias. Read more: 6 keys to how Sánchez is managing his negotiations for the investiture, according to consultants and political scientists While Sánchez warned Iglesias to consider a hypothetical Podemos vote "with the extreme right" - in reference to a negative vote together with the PP, Cs and Middle East Phone Number List Vox - in case no agreement to form a government was successful, those from Iglesias responded forcefully. A forcefulness that was seen both inside and outside the chamber. On the one hand, and from his seat, Iglesias recounted some details of the negotiations that had been taking place between the Socialists and Podemos, regarding the portfolios that had been put on the table.

Iglesias complained that none of the proposals put forward by Unidas Podemos had the approval of the PSOE, and he went further: he asked Sánchez exactly what his candidacy was proposing. Read more: Sánchez does not achieve the investiture in the first vote (124 in favor, 170 against and 52 abstentions) and is still waiting for the negotiation with Podemos to prosper Rafael Mayoral, head of Podemos, warned through Twitter that in his organization they only have "two cheeks." Iglesias' intervention, which has been widely applauded in recent hours, has become the topic of the moment on social networks through hashtags such as RespetaMiVotoPedro .
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