Miriam Nogueras’ betrayal

During his visit to Fomento last week, Figo asked Catalan businessmen who vote for Juntes to pressure his party to support the proposal and hold new elections. Junts knows that her voters need this change, because they are saving the middle class, And he invested in some real estate so that inflation would not eat away the fruits of his labor; Or self-employed people. Or small and medium-sized companies that were clearly affected by the leftist and populist measures taken by Pedro Sánchez.

Juntes knows all this, and Puigdemont knows it too, but the fugitive president has one goal: to be able to return to Spain, and He correctly believes that only an agreement with Sanchez can help him. In this case, the head of government has both the advantage and the disadvantage of having the upper hand: the advantage, because as long as Puigdemont is not in Spain, he will not be permanently separated from him, because he is convinced that this is his only safe conduct; And inconvenience, because once Puigdemont returns home he will have little political success, and Gant will have less incentive to maintain an agreement with the Socialists that would clearly harm his electorate, which also supports the government of Salvador Illa in the State General.

There is an additional distortion between Sánchez and Gontes, which several pro-independence party politicians warned Puigdemont about: Miriam Nogueras, spokeswoman for the pro-independence parties in Congress, vice-president of the party, and the person most trusted by the fugitive, would betray this trust by forging the Socialists’ letters to Waterloo to spoil the relationship between the two. Nogueras has made it clear to his trusted people that he does not agree with the Charter, and in his independence extremism he wants to break away from everything, break everything, and return to chaos, rebellion and unilateralism. It was Nogueras who conveyed his excessive anxiety to Puigdemont Due to the alleged socialist failure to comply with what was agreed upon in exchange for Sanchez’s inauguration. The more moderate sectors of the Junts hope that when Puigdemont returns to Girona, he will realize the deception and withdraw his confidence from Nogueras. The one who seemed to be a potential candidate for the presidency of the state may be approaching the end of her political career, because if Puigdemont, who has all the information, decides to “pardon” her, the moderates who are waiting for the end of the Belgian trip to take over the reins of the party will not do so.

The president of the Constitutional Court, Candido Conde Pompidou, adjusted the pace of his work to suit the political needs of the head of government; Perdue-Sanchez played a small, but not entirely, role in ensuring that Puigdemont was needed until the end of the term; Puigdemont, who has turned Catalonia and Catalanism into his personal problem, is caught between his obsession to return to Spain as soon as possible, and the growth of Aliensa Catalana, which forces him to point towards extremism. Miriam Nogueras, who has her own agenda, uses the distance between her supporters to blow up bridges with either of the two main parties (also with the People’s Party, whose messages are conveyed equally distorted) and appears in front of her own, when Puigdemont assumes that her career is over. As a new rebel heroine to lead Catalonia Towards independence.