The news that Pedro Sánchez takes a few days of reflection before deciding whether to resign or continue as President of the Government has shocked political life. It is even more surprising because Sánchez boasted of being resilient and was considered by those closest to him a man of steel. And for the most distant, or his political enemies, a ‘killer’ who unscrupulously liquidated his adversaries. But it is true that behind the harshest politicians there is a human person. AND Sánchez may be hurt by what he calls “a campaign of harassment and demolition by land, sea and air” that in the elections he even blurted out “that Txapote votes for you” (the ETA terrorist) and that now he has attacked the honorability of his wife Begoña Gómez. Something similar must have happened to Adolfo Suárez when, criticized left and right even by the majority of his own party and possibly pressured by the military of that time, he resigned in 1981 “so that democracy would not be a parenthesis in the history of Spain.” ».
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