
The president of the PSOE, Cristina Narbona, shared “the call for co-responsibility of public administrations and political parties” made by Felipe VI in his Christmas message and expressed his party’s commitment to “work to guarantee the maximum exemplary action”.
“In a country as decentralized as ours, None of these challenges can be successfully met without real involvement, an active and coherent involvement of all administrations, all levels of public administration and all parties that govern these administrations”, expressed Narbona in a message evaluating the King’s speech published on social networks. This is why, he added, the PSOE “shares and accepts this call for co-responsibility”.
The socialist leader referred to “a turbulent world in which we must live with a bankrupt world order, with a serious crisis of multilateralism” and this leads “King Felipe VI to call on all citizens and, in particular, political parties, to fight for defend the integrity of democratic institutions as something necessary to preserve the common good.”
“That we defend them in a context of inequalities and disinformation, elements which fuel populism,” added Narbona, for whom The PSOE “is fully committed to this fight”. “We are committed, we know very well that we must work to guarantee maximum exemplary action,” added the president of the Socialists.
Risk of democratic coexistence
He stressed that the King “focused on the risks that threaten democratic coexistence and in the need to confront it through dialogue, respect and defense of the constitutional framework and the values of the European project.”
“THE Constitution of 1978 and our membership of the European Union “These are factors that have led, in recent decades, in Spain, to the consolidation of our rights and freedoms, to political pluralism, to the recognition of our diversity, to the opening of Spain to the outside world and, of course, to economic and social prosperity,” recalled Narbona.
For the socialist leader, “all these successes of recent decades have generated a recognition of rights and freedoms”, which are now “threatened by extremism, by populism, as King Felipe VI emphasizes, by doctrines whose disastrous consequences have been known in Spain for a long time”. “The king Remember that to overcome this dark page of history, shared will was decisive by very different political forces who have decided to work to move forward,” he added.
Finally, he expressed the confidence of the PSOE “in the capacity of the Spanish people and in particular of young people must continue to progress in Spain in democratic coexistence and in increasingly shared, fairer and more sustainable prosperity.
For this reason, he encouraged think “especially of the most vulnerable” whose dignity is rightly invoked by King Felipe VI and to address and resolve the problems that most concern Spaniards: access to housing, the cost of living, the uncertainties caused by technological changes, the necessary prevention and effective response to climate emergencies.